Package Exports
- @inquirer/rawlist
Readme
@inquirer/rawlist
Simple interactive command line prompt to display a raw list of choices (single value select) with minimal interaction.
Installation
| npm | yarn |
|---|---|
npm install @inquirer/prompts |
yarn add @inquirer/prompts |
| Or | |
npm install @inquirer/rawlist |
yarn add @inquirer/rawlist |
Usage
import { rawlist } from '@inquirer/prompts';
// Or
// import rawlist from '@inquirer/rawlist';
const answer = await rawlist({
message: 'Select a package manager',
choices: [
{ name: 'npm', value: 'npm' },
{ name: 'yarn', value: 'yarn' },
{ name: 'pnpm', value: 'pnpm' },
],
});Options
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| message | string |
yes | The question to ask |
| choices | Choice[] |
yes | List of the available choices. |
| theme | See Theming | no | Customize look of the prompt. |
Separator objects can be used in the choices array to render non-selectable lines in the choice list. By default it'll render a line, but you can provide the text as argument (new Separator('-- Dependencies --')). This option is often used to add labels to groups within long list of options.
Choice object
The Choice object is typed as
type Choice<Value> = {
value: Value;
name?: string;
short?: string;
key?: string;
};Here's each property:
value: The value is what will be returned byawait select().name: This is the string displayed in the choice list.short: Once the prompt is done (press enter), we'll useshortif defined to render next to the question. By default we'll usename.key: The key of the choice. Displayed askey) name.
Theming
You can theme a prompt by passing a theme object option. The theme object only need to includes the keys you wish to modify, we'll fallback on the defaults for the rest.
type Theme = {
prefix: string;
spinner: {
interval: number;
frames: string[];
};
style: {
answer: (text: string) => string;
message: (text: string) => string;
error: (text: string) => string;
highlight: (text: string) => string;
};
};License
Copyright (c) 2023 Simon Boudrias (twitter: @vaxilart)
Licensed under the MIT license.