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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to emulate ^S/^Q from a script Post 302393686 by AliceD on Tuesday 9th of February 2010 11:13:55 AM
Old 02-09-2010
How to emulate ^S/^Q from a script

Hi,

I wrote a little menu script that searches through another script you specify and displays step-names and next to it the text of the step. The scripts are converted JCL from mainframe. It alows you to select steps you want and will then create a new script which includes only the steps you selected. It looks something like
Code:
Step        Selected     Text
S0010       [ ]             S0030 #Here we do some stuff
S0020       [ ]             cp file to otherfile
S0030       [x]             some more commands.....
S0040       [ ]              .
S0050       [ ]              .
                                 .
                                ## End of step 0030

I am using tput to position the cursor for each of the text lines and clear the lines one at a time. You can however notice the clearing/drawing, its a bit slow. I have loaded it into a table so no disk reading involved. When I display the text below the steps it is super fast, no visible delay, but then I dont have to position the cursor, just delete till end of terminal and echo the text.

Because of space, some scripts have a lot of steps plus it looks more impressive, I want to keep the layout as above.

I have been playing with flow control from the command line. i.e. If you type ^S, then type some commands nothing is echoed, then type ^Q it will echo everyting you typed etc.

I want to do the same from the script, I think I am just being thick cannot figure out how. How do I in the script emulate ^S and ^Q. I have been searching all day but most articles are about enabling/disabling flow control via IXON, not what I want.

I want to stop scrolling, do my erase of old lines and echo of new lines, then send to the screen by enabling scrolling again in the script.

Thanks!

---------- Post updated at 04:13 PM ---------- Previous update was at 04:10 PM ----------

My spaces have dissapeared, looks like below, underscore=space

Step_Selected_Text
S0010_[ ]_____S0030 #Here we do some stuff
S0020_[ ]_____cp file to otherfile
S0030_[x]_____some more commands.....
S0040_[ ]_____.
S0050_[ ]_____.
______________.
______________even more commands
______________## End of step 0030

Last edited by vbe; 02-09-2010 at 12:46 PM.. Reason: added code tags
 

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after(n)						       Tcl Built-In Commands							  after(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
after - Execute a command after a time delay SYNOPSIS
after ms after ms ?script script script ...? after cancel id after cancel script script script ... after idle ?script script script ...? after info ?id? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
This command is used to delay execution of the program or to execute a command in background sometime in the future. It has several forms, depending on the first argument to the command: after ms Ms must be an integer giving a time in milliseconds. The command sleeps for ms milliseconds and then returns. While the command is sleeping the application does not respond to events. after ms ?script script script ...? In this form the command returns immediately, but it arranges for a Tcl command to be executed ms milliseconds later as an event handler. The command will be executed exactly once, at the given time. The delayed command is formed by concatenating all the script arguments in the same fashion as the concat command. The command will be executed at global level (outside the context of any Tcl procedure). If an error occurs while executing the delayed command then the background error will be reported by the com- mand registered with interp bgerror. The after command returns an identifier that can be used to cancel the delayed command using after cancel. after cancel id Cancels the execution of a delayed command that was previously scheduled. Id indicates which command should be canceled; it must have been the return value from a previous after command. If the command given by id has already been executed then the after can- cel command has no effect. after cancel script script ... This command also cancels the execution of a delayed command. The script arguments are concatenated together with space separators (just as in the concat command). If there is a pending command that matches the string, it is cancelled and will never be executed; if no such command is currently pending then the after cancel command has no effect. after idle script ?script script ...? Concatenates the script arguments together with space separators (just as in the concat command), and arranges for the resulting script to be evaluated later as an idle callback. The script will be run exactly once, the next time the event loop is entered and there are no events to process. The command returns an identifier that can be used to cancel the delayed command using after can- cel. If an error occurs while executing the script then the background error will be reported by the command registered with interp bgerror. after info ?id? This command returns information about existing event handlers. If no id argument is supplied, the command returns a list of the identifiers for all existing event handlers created by the after command for this interpreter. If id is supplied, it specifies an existing handler; id must have been the return value from some previous call to after and it must not have triggered yet or been cancelled. In this case the command returns a list with two elements. The first element of the list is the script associated with id, and the second element is either idle or timer to indicate what kind of event handler it is. The after ms and after idle forms of the command assume that the application is event driven: the delayed commands will not be executed unless the application enters the event loop. In applications that are not normally event-driven, such as tclsh, the event loop can be entered with the vwait and update commands. EXAMPLES
This defines a command to make Tcl do nothing at all for N seconds: proc sleep {N} { after [expr {int($N * 1000)}] } This arranges for the command wake_up to be run in eight hours (providing the event loop is active at that time): after [expr {1000 * 60 * 60 * 8}] wake_up The following command can be used to do long-running calculations (as represented here by ::my_calc::one_step, which is assumed to return a boolean indicating whether another step should be performed) in a step-by-step fashion, though the calculation itself needs to be arranged so it can work step-wise. This technique is extra careful to ensure that the event loop is not starved by the rescheduling of processing steps (arranging for the next step to be done using an already-triggered timer event only when the event queue has been drained) and is useful when you want to ensure that a Tk GUI remains responsive during a slow task. proc doOneStep {} { if {[::my_calc::one_step]} { after idle [list after 0 doOneStep] } } doOneStep SEE ALSO
concat(n), interp(n), update(n), vwait(n) KEYWORDS
cancel, delay, idle callback, sleep, time Tcl 7.5 after(n)
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