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Spectre.Console AutoCompletion

NuGet Nuget License PR GitHub Workflow Status

JKToolKit.Spectre.AutoCompletion is an extension package for adding auto completion to your Spectre.Console powered applications.
It comes with suggestions for Options and Branches out of the box, but you can also add your own suggestions for option and argument values.

Enabling Module

The extension can be enabled using the AddAutoCompletion method on the Configurator object.

using JKToolKit.Spectre.AutoCompletion.Completion;
using JKToolKit.Spectre.AutoCompletion.Integrations;

//... 

public static void Main(string[] args)
{
    var app = new CommandApp();
    app.Configure
    (
        config =>
        {
            config
                .AddAutoCompletion(x => x.AddPowershell())
                .AddCommand<LionCommand>("lion");
        }
    ) ;
}

Shell integrations

  1. PowerShell
  2. More to come...

PowerShell

You can add autocomplete to PowerShell by running your application with the completion powershell command, as shown below:

.\AutoCompletion.exe completion powershell | Out-String | Invoke-Expression

To add autocomplete to PowerShell permanently, use the --install flag:

.\AutoCompletion.exe completion powershell --install | Out-String | Invoke-Expression

How integrations get the suggestions

The shell integration uses the completion complete command to get the suggestions for the current command line like this:

.\AutoCompletion.exe completion complete "AutoCompletion.exe Li"

Customizations

  1. Static Autocomplete
  2. Dynamic Autocomplete

Static Autocomplete

Spectre.Console auto completion allows you to specify static autocomplete suggestions for your command arguments and options. This can be done using the CompletionSuggestions attribute in your command settings class.

Here's an example of how to add static autocomplete suggestions:

public class LionSettings : CommandSettings
{
    [CommandArgument(0, "<TEETH>")]
    [Description("The number of teeth the lion has.")]
    [CompletionSuggestions("10", "15", "20", "30")]
    public int Teeth { get; set; }

    [CommandOption("-a|--age <AGE>")]
    public int Age { get; set; }

    [CommandOption("-n|--name <NAME>")]
    public string Name { get; set; }
}

Dynamic Autocomplete

In addition to static autocomplete suggestions, you can also provide dynamic autocomplete suggestions based on the user's input. This can be done by implementing the IAsyncCommandCompletable interface in your command class and overriding the GetSuggestionsAsync method.

Here's an example of how to add dynamic autocomplete suggestions:

[Description("The lion command.")]
public class LionCommand : Command<LionSettings>, IAsyncCommandCompletable
{
    public override int Execute(CommandContext context, LionSettings settings)
    {
        return 0;
    }

    public async Task<CompletionResult> GetSuggestionsAsync(IMappedCommandParameter parameter, ICompletionContext context)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(parameter.Value))
        {
            return CompletionResult.None();
        }

        return await this.MatchAsync()
            .Add(x => x.Legs, (prefix) =>
            {
                if (prefix.Length != 0)
                {
                    return FindNextEvenNumber(prefix);
                }

                return "16";
            })
            .Add(x => x.Teeth, (prefix) =>
            {
                if (prefix.Length != 0)
                {
                    return FindNextEvenNumber(prefix);
                }

                return "32";
            })
            .Add(x => x.Name, prefix =>
            {
                var names = new List<string>
                {
                    "angel", "angelika", "robert",
                    "jennifer", "michael", "lucy",
                    "david", "sarah", "john", "katherine",
                    "mark"
                };

                var bestMatches = names
                    .Where(name => name.StartsWith(prefix))
                    .ToList();

                return new CompletionResult(bestMatches, bestMatches.Any());
            })
            .MatchAsync(parameter)
            .WithPreventDefault();
    }
}

There is a working example of the AutoCompletion feature demonstrating this.


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