dialog - display dialog boxes from shell scripts
dialog --clear
dialog --create-rc file
dialog --print-maxsize
dialog common-options box-options
Dialog is a program that will let you present a variety of questions or
display messages using dialog boxes from a shell script. These types of dialog
boxes are implemented (though not all are necessarily compiled into
dialog):
buildlist,
calendar,
checklist,
dselect,
editbox,
form,
fselect,
gauge,
infobox,
inputbox,
inputmenu,
menu,
mixedform,
mixedgauge,
msgbox (message),
passwordbox,
passwordform,
pause,
prgbox,
programbox,
progressbox,
radiolist,
rangebox,
tailbox,
tailboxbg,
textbox,
timebox,
treeview, and
yesno (yes/no).
You can put more than one dialog box into a script:
- •
- Use the "--and-widget" token to force
dialog to proceed to the next dialog unless you have pressed ESC to
cancel, or
- •
- Simply add the tokens for the next dialog box, making a
chain. Dialog stops chaining when the return code from a dialog is
nonzero, e.g., Cancel or No (see DIAGNOSTICS).
Some widgets, e.g., checklist, will write text to
dialog's output.
Normally that is the standard error, but there are options for changing this:
“
--output-fd”, “
--stderr” and
“
--stdout”. No text is written if the Cancel button (or
ESC) is pressed;
dialog exits immediately in that case.
All options begin with “
--” (two ASCII hyphens, for the
benefit of those using systems with deranged locale support).
A “
--” by itself is used as an escape, i.e., the next
token on the command-line is not treated as an option. This is different from
getopt(1), which uses that token to treat the remaining tokens as
parameters rather than
options.
dialog --title -- --Not an option
dialog --title This -- --title is not an option
Dialog uses no
parameters, and uses its own
options parser.
When a common (e.g., non-widget) option is repeated, the last found is the one
that is used. Boolean options are handled specially so they can be cancelled,
by adding (or omitting) a “no” modifier after the leading
“
--”. For instance,
--no-shadow is documented
here, but
--shadow also is accepted.
The “
--args” option tells
dialog to list the
command-line parameters to the standard error. This is useful when debugging
complex scripts using the “
--” and
“
--file”, since the command-line may be rewritten as
these are expanded.
The “
--file” option tells
dialog to read parameters
from the file named as its value.
dialog --file
parameterfile
Blanks not within double-quotes are discarded (use backslashes to quote single
characters). The result is inserted into the command-line, replacing “
--file” and its option value. Interpretation of the command-line
resumes from that point. If
parameterfile begins with
“&”,
dialog interprets the following text as a file
descriptor number rather than a filename.
Most widgets accept
height and
width parameters, which can be used
to automatically size the widget to accommodate multi-line message
prompt values:
- •
- If the parameter is negative, dialog uses the
screen's size.
- •
- If the parameter is zero, dialog uses minimum size
for the widget to display the prompt and data.
- •
- Otherwise, dialog uses the given size for the
widget.
Most of the common options are reset before processing each widget.
- --ascii-lines
- Rather than draw graphics lines around boxes, draw ASCII
“+” and “-” in the same place. See also
“ --no-lines”.
-
--aspect ratio
- This gives you some control over the box dimensions when
using auto sizing (specifying 0 for height and width). It represents width
/ height. The default is 9, which means 9 characters wide to every 1 line
high.
-
--backtitle backtitle
- Specifies a backtitle string to be displayed on the
backdrop, at the top of the screen.
-
--begin y x
- Specify the position of the upper left corner of a dialog
box on the screen.
-
--cancel-label string
- Override the label used for “Cancel”
buttons.
- --clear
- Clears the widget screen, keeping only the screen_color
background. Use this when you combine widgets with “
--and-widget” to erase the contents of a previous widget on
the screen, so it won't be seen under the contents of a following widget.
Understand this as the complement of “
--keep-window”. To compare the effects, use these:
- All three widgets visible, staircase effect, ordered
1,2,3:
dialog \
--begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0
- Only the last widget is left visible:
dialog \
--clear --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --clear --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0
- All three widgets visible, staircase effect, ordered
3,2,1:
dialog \
--keep-window --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --keep-window --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0
- First and third widget visible, staircase effect, ordered
3,1:
dialog \
--keep-window --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --clear --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0 \
--and-widget --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0
- Note, if you want to restore original console colors and
send your cursor home after the dialog program has exited, use the
clear(1) command. Conversely, if you want to clear the screen and
send your cursor to the lower left after the dialog program has
exited, use the --erase-on-exit option.
- --colors
- Interpret embedded “\Z” sequences in the
dialog text by the following character, which tells dialog to set
colors or video attributes:
- •
- 0 through 7 are the ANSI color numbers used in curses:
black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan and white
respectively.
- •
- Bold is set by 'b', reset by 'B'.
- •
- Reverse is set by 'r', reset by 'R'.
- •
- Underline is set by 'u', reset by 'U'.
- •
- The settings are cumulative, e.g., “\Zb\Z1”
makes the following text bold (perhaps bright) red.
- •
- Restore normal settings with “\Zn”.
-
--column-separator string
- Tell dialog to split data for radio/checkboxes and
menus on the occurrences of the given string, and to align the split data
into columns.
- --cr-wrap
- Interpret embedded newlines in the dialog text as a newline
on the screen. Otherwise, dialog will only wrap lines where needed
to fit inside the text box.
- Even though you can control line breaks with this,
Dialog will still wrap any lines that are too long for the width of
the box. Without cr-wrap, the layout of your text may be formatted to look
nice in the source code of your script without affecting the way it will
look in the dialog.
- The cr-wrap feature is implemented subject to these
conditions:
- •
- the string contains “\n” and the
--no-nl-expand option is not used, or
- •
- the --trim option is used.
- For more information, see Whitespace Options.
-
--create-rc file
- When dialog supports run-time configuration, this
can be used to dump a sample configuration file to the file specified by
file.
- --cursor-off-label
- Place the terminal cursor at the end of a button instead of
on the first character of the button label. This is useful to reduce
visual confusion when the cursor coloration interacts poorly with the
button-label text colors.
-
--date-format format
- If the host provides strftime, this option allows
you to specify the format of the date printed for the --calendar
widget. The time of day (hour, minute, second) are the current local
time.
- --defaultno
- Make the default value of the yes/no box a
No. Likewise, treat the default button of widgets that provide
“OK” and “Cancel” as a Cancel. If
“ --no-cancel” or
“--visit-items” are given those options overrides
this, making the default button always “Yes” (internally the
same as “OK”).
-
--default-button string
- Set the default (preselected) button in a widget. By
preselecting a button, a script makes it possible for the user to simply
press Enter to proceed through a dialog with minimum
interaction.
- The option's value is the name of the button: ok,
yes, cancel, no, help or
extra.
- Normally the first button in each widget is the default.
The first button shown is determined by the widget together with the
“ --no-ok” and “ --no-cancel”
options. If this option is not given, there is no default button
assigned.
-
--default-item string
- Set the default item in a checklist, form or menu box.
Normally the first item in the box is the default.
- --erase-on-exit
- When dialog exits, remove the dialog widget, erasing
the entire screen to its native background color, and place the terminal
cursor at the lower left corner.
-
--exit-label string
- Override the label used for “EXIT”
buttons.
- --extra-button
- Show an extra button, between “OK” and
“Cancel” buttons.
- The extra button appears between “Yes” and
“No” for the yesno widget.
-
--extra-label string
- Override the label used for “Extra” buttons.
Note: for inputmenu widgets, this defaults to “Rename”.
- --help
- Prints the help message to the standard output and exits.
The help message is also printed if no options are given, or if an
unrecognized option is given.
- --help-button
- Show a help-button after “OK” and
“Cancel” buttons in boxes which have a list of tagged items
(i.e., checklist, radiolist, menu, and treeview boxes).
- The help-button appears after “Yes” and
“No” for the yesno widget.
- On exit, the return status indicates that the Help button
was pressed. Dialog also writes a message to its output after the
token “HELP”:
- •
- If "--item-help" is also given, the
item-help text is written.
- •
- Otherwise, the item's tag (the first field) is
written.
- You can use the --help-tags option and/or set the
DIALOG_ITEM_HELP environment variable to modify these messages and
exit-status.
- This option can be applied to other widgets, which have an
“OK” button, whether or not the “Cancel”
button is used. The return status and output are not treated specially for
the other widgets; the help-button is just an extra button.
-
--help-label string
- Override the label used for “Help”
buttons.
- --help-status
- If the help-button is selected, writes the checklist,
radiolist or form information after the item-help “HELP”
information. This can be used to reconstruct the state of a checklist
after processing the help request.
- --help-tags
- Modify the messages written on exit for
--help-button by making them always just the item's tag. This does
not affect the exit status code.
-
--hfile filename
- Display the given file using a textbox when the user
presses F1.
-
--hline string
- Display the given string centered at the bottom of the
widget.
- --ignore
- Ignore options that dialog does not recognize. Some
well-known ones such as “ --icon” are ignored anyway,
but this is a better choice for compatibility with other
implementations.
-
--input-fd fd
- Read keyboard input from the given file descriptor. Most
dialog scripts read from the standard input, but the gauge widget
reads a pipe (which is always standard input). Some configurations do not
work properly when dialog tries to reopen the terminal. Use this
option (with appropriate juggling of file-descriptors) if your script must
work in that type of environment.
- --insecure
- Makes the password widget friendlier but less secure, by
echoing asterisks for each character.
- --iso-week
- Set the starting point for the week-number shown in the
“ --calendar” option according to ISO-8601, which
starts numbering with the first week which includes a Thursday in
January.
- --item-help
- Interpret the tags data for checklist, radiolist and menu
boxes adding a column which is displayed in the bottom line of the screen,
for the currently selected item.
- --keep-tite
- When built with ncurses, dialog normally
checks to see if it is running in an xterm, and in that case tries
to suppress the initialization strings that would make it switch to the
alternate screen. Switching between the normal and alternate screens is
visually distracting in a script which runs dialog several times.
Use this option to allow dialog to use those initialization
strings.
- --keep-window
- Normally when dialog performs several
tailboxbg widgets connected by “
--and-widget”, it clears the old widget from the screen by
painting over it. Use this option to suppress that repainting.
- At exit, dialog repaints all of the widgets which
have been marked with “ --keep-window”, even if they
are not tailboxbg widgets. That causes them to be repainted in
reverse order. See the discussion of the “ --clear”
option for examples.
- --last-key
- At exit, report the last key which the user entered. This
is the curses key code rather than a symbol or literal character, and is
only reported for keys which are bound to an action. It can be used by
scripts to distinguish between two keys which are bound to the same
action.
-
--max-input size
- Limit input strings to the given size. If not specified,
the limit is 2048.
- --no-cancel
- Suppress the “Cancel” button in checklist,
inputbox and menu box modes. A script can still test if the user pressed
the ESC key to cancel to quit.
- --no-collapse
- Normally dialog converts tabs to spaces and reduces
multiple spaces to a single space for text which is displayed in a message
boxes, etc. Use this option to disable that feature. Note that
dialog will still wrap text, subject to the “
--cr-wrap” and “ --trim” options.
- The no-collapse feature is implemented subject to
these conditions:
- •
- the string contains “\n” and the
--no-nl-expand option is not used, or
- •
- the --trim option is not used.
- For more information, see Whitespace Options.
- --no-hot-list
- Tells dialog to suppress the hotkey feature for
lists, e.g., the checkbox, menus.
- Normally, the first uppercase character of a list entry
will be highlighted, and typing that character will move the focus to that
entry. This option suppresses both the highlighting and the movement.
- Hotkeys for buttons (“OK” ,
“Cancel”, etc.) are unaffected.
- --no-items
- Some widgets (checklist, inputmenu, radiolist, menu)
display a list with two columns (a “tag” and
“item”, i.e., “description”). This option
tells dialog to read shorter rows, omitting the
“item” part of the list. This is occasionally useful, e.g.,
if the tags provide enough information.
- See also --no-tags. If both options are given, this
one is ignored.
- --no-kill
- Tells dialog to put the tailboxbg box in the
background, printing its process id to dialog's output. SIGHUP is
disabled for the background process.
-
--no-label string
- Override the label used for “No”
buttons.
- --no-lines
- Rather than draw lines around boxes, draw spaces in the
same place. See also “ --ascii-lines”.
- --no-mouse
- Do not enable the mouse.
- --no-nl-expand
- Do not convert “\n” substrings of the
message/prompt text into literal newlines.
- The no-nl-expand feature is used only if the string
contains “\n” so that there is something to convert.
- For more information, see Whitespace Options.
- --no-ok
- Suppress the “OK” button, so that it is not
displayed. A script can still test if the user pressed the
“Enter” key to accept the data:
- •
- The “Enter” key is always handled as the
“OK” button when the --no-ok option is used. That is,
by default it is bound to the LEAVE virtual key.
- When --no-ok is not used, you can use the the
Tab key to move the cursor through the fields and buttons on the
widget. In that case, the “Enter” key activates the current
button if the cursor is positioned on a button.
- •
- To provide for the case where you want to activate a button
when using --no-ok, there is another virtual key LEAVE,
which activates the current button. By default, ^D (EOF) is bound
to that key.
- --no-shadow
- Suppress shadows that would be drawn to the right and
bottom of each dialog box.
- --no-tags
- Some widgets (checklist, inputmenu, radiolist, menu)
display a list with two columns (a “tag” and
“description”). The tag is useful for scripting, but may not
help the user. The --no-tags option (from Xdialog) may be used to
suppress the column of tags from the display. Unlike the --no-items
option, this does not affect the data which is read from the script.
- Xdialog does not display the tag column for the analogous
buildlist and treeview widgets; dialog does the same.
- Normally dialog allows you to quickly move to
entries on the displayed list, by matching a single character to the first
character of the tag. When the --no-tags option is given,
dialog matches against the first character of the description. In
either case, the matchable character is highlighted.
-
--ok-label string
- Override the label used for “OK”
buttons.
-
--output-fd fd
- Direct output to the given file descriptor. Most
dialog scripts write to the standard error, but error messages may
also be written there, depending on your script.
-
--separator string
-
--output-separator string
- Specify a string that will separate the output on
dialog's output from checklists, rather than a newline (for
--separate-output) or a space. This applies to other widgets such
as forms and editboxes which normally use a newline.
- --print-maxsize
- Print the maximum size of dialog boxes, i.e., the screen
size, to dialog's output. This may be used alone, without other
options.
- --print-size
- Prints the size of each dialog box to dialog's
output when the box is initialized.
-
--print-text-only string [ height [ width ]
]
- Prints the string as it would be wrapped in a message box
to dialog's output.
- Because the optional height and width default
to zero, if they are omitted, dialog autosizes according to the
screen dimensions.
-
--print-text-size string [ height [ width ]
]
- Prints the size of the string as it would be wrapped in a
message box, to dialog's output, as
- Because the optional height and width
parameters default to zero, if they are omitted, dialog autosizes
according to the screen dimensions.
- --print-version
- Prints dialog's version to dialog's output.
This may be used alone, without other options. It does not cause
dialog to exit by itself.
- --quoted
- Normally dialog quotes the strings returned by
checklist's as well as the item-help text. Use this option to quote all
string results as needed (i.e., if the string contains whitespace or a
single or double-quote character).
- --reorder
- By default, the buildlist widget uses the same order for
the output (right) list as for the input (left). Use this option to tell
dialog to use the order in which a user adds selections to the
output list.
- --scrollbar
- For widgets holding a scrollable set of data, draw a
scrollbar on its right-margin. This does not respond to the mouse.
- --separate-output
- For certain widgets (buildlist, checklist, treeview),
output result one line at a time, with no quoting. This facilitates
parsing by another program.
-
--separate-widget string
- Specify a string that will separate the output on
dialog's output from each widget. This is used to simplify parsing
the result of a dialog with several widgets. If this option is not given,
the default separator string is a tab character.
- --single-quoted
- Use single-quoting as needed (and no quotes if unneeded)
for the output of checklist's as well as the item-help text.
- If this option is not set, dialog may use double
quotes around each item. In either case, dialog adds backslashes to
make the output useful in shell scripts.
- Single quotes would be needed if the string contains
whitespace or a single or double-quote character.
- --size-err
- Check the resulting size of a dialog box before trying to
use it, printing the resulting size if it is larger than the screen. (This
option is obsolete, since all new-window calls are checked).
-
--sleep secs
- Sleep (delay) for the given number of seconds after
processing a dialog box.
- --stderr
- Direct output to the standard error. This is the default,
since curses normally writes screen updates to the standard output.
- --stdout
- Direct output to the standard output. This option is
provided for compatibility with Xdialog, however using it in portable
scripts is not recommended, since curses normally writes its screen
updates to the standard output. If you use this option, dialog
attempts to reopen the terminal so it can write to the display. Depending
on the platform and your environment, that may fail.
- --tab-correct
- Convert each tab character to one or more spaces (for the
textbox widget; otherwise to a single space). Otherwise, tabs are
rendered according to the curses library's interpretation. The
--no-collapse option disables tab expansion.
-
--tab-len n
- Specify the number of spaces that a tab character occupies
if the “ --tab-correct” option is given. The default
is 8. This option is only effective for the textbox widget.
-
--time-format format
- If the host provides strftime, this option allows
you to specify the format of the time printed for the --timebox
widget. The day, month, year values in this case are for the current local
time.
-
--timeout secs
- Timeout if no user response within the given number of
seconds. A timeout of zero seconds is ignored.
- Normally a timeout causes an ESC character to be entered in
the current widget, cancelling it. Other widgets may still be on the
screen; these are not cancelled. Set the DIALOG_TIMEOUT environment
variable to tell dialog to directly exit instead, i.e., cancelling
all widgets on the screen.
- This option is ignored by the
“--pause” widget. It is also overridden if the
background “ --tailboxbg” option is used to set up
multiple concurrent widgets.
-
--title title
- Specifies a title string to be displayed at the top
of the dialog box.
-
--trace filename
- logs the command-line parameters, keystrokes and other
information to the given file. If dialog reads a configure file, it
is logged as well. Piped input to the gauge widget is logged. Use
control/T to log a picture of the current dialog window.
- The dialog program handles some command-line
parameters specially, and removes them from the parameter list as they are
processed. For example, if the first option is --trace, then that
is processed (and removed) before dialog initializes the
display.
-
--week-start day
- sets the starting day for the week, used in the “
--calendar” option. The day parameter can be
- •
- a number (0 to 6, Sunday through Saturday using POSIX)
or
- •
- the special value “locale” (this works with
systems using glibc, providing an extension to the locale command,
the first_weekday value).
- •
- a string matching one of the abbreviations for the day of
the week shown in the calendar widget, e.g., “Mo” for
“Monday”.
- --trim
- eliminate leading blanks, trim literal newlines and
repeated blanks from message text.
- The trim feature is implemented subject to these
conditions:
- •
- the string does not contain “\n” or
- •
- the --no-nl-expand option is used.
- For more information, see Whitespace Options.
- See also the “--cr-wrap” and “
--no-collapse” options.
- --version
- Prints dialog's version to the standard output, and
exits. See also “ --print-version”.
- --visit-items
- Modify the tab-traversal of checklist, radiolist, menubox
and inputmenu to include the list of items as one of the states. This is
useful as a visual aid, i.e., the cursor position helps some users.
- When this option is given, the cursor is initially placed
on the list. Abbreviations (the first letter of the tag) apply to the list
items. If you tab to the button row, abbreviations apply to the
buttons.
-
--yes-label string
- Override the label used for “Yes”
buttons.
All dialog boxes have at least three parameters:
- text
- the caption or contents of the box.
- height
- the height of the dialog box.
- width
- the width of the dialog box.
Other parameters depend on the box type.
-
--buildlist text height width list-height [
tag item status ] ...
- A buildlist dialog displays two lists, side-by-side.
The list on the left shows unselected items. The list on the right shows
selected items. As items are selected or unselected, they move between the
lists.
- Use a carriage return or the “OK” button to
accept the current value in the selected-window and exit. The results are
written using the order displayed in the selected-window.
- The initial on/off state of each entry is specified by
status.
- The dialog behaves like a menu, using the
--visit-items to control whether the cursor is allowed to visit the
lists directly.
- •
- If --visit-items is not given, tab-traversal uses
two states (OK/Cancel).
- •
- If --visit-items is given, tab-traversal uses four
states (Left/Right/OK/Cancel).
- Whether or not --visit-items is given, it is
possible to move the highlight between the two lists using the default
“^” (left-column) and “$” (right-column)
keys.
- On exit, a list of the tag strings of those entries
that are turned on will be printed on dialog's output.
- If the "--separate-output" option is not
given, the strings will be quoted as needed to make it simple for scripts
to separate them. By default, this uses double-quotes, as needed. See the
“ --single-quoted” option, which modifies the quoting
behavior.
-
--calendar text height width day month
year
- A calendar box displays month, day and year in
separately adjustable windows. If the values for day, month or year are
missing or negative, the current date's corresponding values are used. You
can increment or decrement any of those using the left-, up-, right-, and
down-arrows. Use vi-style h, j, k and l for moving around the array of
days in a month. Use tab or backtab to move between windows. If the year
is given as zero, the current date is used as an initial value.
- On exit, the date is printed in the form day/month/year.
The format can be overridden using the --date-format option.
-
--checklist text height width list-height [
tag item status ] ...
- A checklist box is similar to a menu box;
there are multiple entries presented in the form of a menu. Another
difference is that you can indicate which entry is currently selected, by
setting its status to on. Instead of choosing one entry
among the entries, each entry can be turned on or off by the user. The
initial on/off state of each entry is specified by status.
- On exit, a list of the tag strings of those entries
that are turned on will be printed on dialog's output.
- If the “--separate-output” option is
not given, the strings will be quoted as needed to make it simple for
scripts to separate them. By default, this uses double-quotes (as needed).
See the “ --single-quoted” option, which modifies the
quoting behavior.
-
--dselect filepath height width
- The directory-selection dialog displays a text-entry window
in which you can type a directory, and above that a windows with directory
names.
- Here filepath can be a filepath in which case the
directory window will display the contents of the path and the text-entry
window will contain the preselected directory.
- Use tab or arrow keys to move between the windows. Within
the directory window, use the up/down arrow keys to scroll the current
selection. Use the space-bar to copy the current selection into the
text-entry window.
- Typing any printable characters switches focus to the
text-entry window, entering that character as well as scrolling the
directory window to the closest match.
- Use a carriage return or the “OK” button to
accept the current value in the text-entry window and exit.
- On exit, the contents of the text-entry window are written
to dialog's output.
-
--editbox filepath height width
- The edit-box dialog displays a copy of the file. You may
edit it using the backspace, delete and cursor keys to
correct typing errors. It also recognizes pageup/pagedown. Unlike the
--inputbox, you must tab to the “OK” or
“Cancel” buttons to close the dialog. Pressing the
“Enter” key within the box will split the corresponding
line.
- On exit, the contents of the edit window are written to
dialog's output.
-
--form text height width formheight [
label y x item y x flen ilen ] ...
-
The form dialog displays a form consisting of labels and fields,
which are positioned on a scrollable window by coordinates given in the
script. The field length flen and input-length ilen tell how
long the field can be. The former defines the length shown for a selected
field, while the latter defines the permissible length of the data entered
in the field.
- •
- If flen is zero, the corresponding field cannot be
altered. and the contents of the field determine the
displayed-length.
- •
- If flen is negative, the corresponding field cannot
be altered, and the negated value of flen is used as the
displayed-length.
- •
- If ilen is zero, it is set to flen.
- Use up/down arrows (or control/N, control/P) to move
between fields. Use tab to move between windows.
- On exit, the contents of the form-fields are written to
dialog's output, each field separated by a newline. The text used
to fill non-editable fields ( flen is zero or negative) is not
written out.
-
--fselect filepath height width
- The fselect (file-selection) dialog displays a
text-entry window in which you can type a filename (or directory), and
above that two windows with directory names and filenames.
- Here filepath can be a filepath in which case the
file and directory windows will display the contents of the path and the
text-entry window will contain the preselected filename.
- Use tab or arrow keys to move between the windows. Within
the directory or filename windows, use the up/down arrow keys to scroll
the current selection. Use the space-bar to copy the current selection
into the text-entry window.
- Typing any printable characters switches focus to the
text-entry window, entering that character as well as scrolling the
directory and filename windows to the closest match.
- Typing the space character forces dialog to complete
the current name (up to the point where there may be a match against more
than one entry).
- Use a carriage return or the “OK” button to
accept the current value in the text-entry window and exit.
- On exit, the contents of the text-entry window are written
to dialog's output.
-
--gauge text height width [percent]
- A gauge box displays a meter along the bottom of the
box. The meter indicates the percentage. New percentages are read from
standard input, one integer per line. The meter is updated to reflect each
new percentage. If the standard input reads the string
“XXX”, then the first line following is taken as an integer
percentage, then subsequent lines up to another “XXX” are
used for a new prompt. The gauge exits when EOF is reached on the standard
input.
- The percent value denotes the initial percentage
shown in the meter. If not specified, it is zero.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. The
widget accepts no input, so the exit status is always OK.
-
--infobox text height width
- An info box is basically a message box.
However, in this case, dialog will exit immediately after
displaying the message to the user. The screen is not cleared when
dialog exits, so that the message will remain on the screen until
the calling shell script clears it later. This is useful when you want to
inform the user that some operations are carrying on that may require some
time to finish.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. An
OK exit status is returned.
-
--inputbox text height width [init]
- An input box is useful when you want to ask
questions that require the user to input a string as the answer. If init
is supplied it is used to initialize the input string. When entering the
string, the backspace, delete and cursor keys can be used to
correct typing errors. If the input string is longer than can fit in the
dialog box, the input field will be scrolled.
- On exit, the input string will be printed on
dialog's output.
-
--inputmenu text height width menu-height [
tag item ] ...
- An inputmenu box is very similar to an ordinary
menu box. There are only a few differences between them:
- 1.
- The entries are not automatically centered but left
adjusted.
- 2.
- An extra button (called Rename) is implied to rename
the current item when it is pressed.
- 3.
- It is possible to rename the current entry by pressing the
Rename button. Then dialog will write the following on
dialog's output.
- RENAMED <tag> <item>
-
--menu text height width menu-height [ tag
item ] ...
- As its name suggests, a menu box is a dialog box
that can be used to present a list of choices in the form of a menu for
the user to choose. Choices are displayed in the order given. Each menu
entry consists of a tag string and an item string. The
tag gives the entry a name to distinguish it from the other entries
in the menu. The item is a short description of the option that the
entry represents. The user can move between the menu entries by pressing
the cursor keys, the first letter of the tag as a hot-key, or the
number keys 1 through 9. There are menu-height
entries displayed in the menu at one time, but the menu will be scrolled
if there are more entries than that.
- On exit the tag of the chosen menu entry will be
printed on dialog's output. If the “
--help-button” option is given, the corresponding help text
will be printed if the user selects the help button.
-
--mixedform text height width formheight [
label y x item y x flen ilen itype ] ...
-
The mixedform dialog displays a form consisting of labels and fields,
much like the --form dialog. It differs by adding a field-type
parameter to each field's description. Each bit in the type denotes an
attribute of the field:
- 1
- hidden, e.g., a password field.
- 2
- readonly, e.g., a label.
-
--mixedgauge text height width percent [
tag1 item1 ] ...
- A mixedgauge box displays a meter along the bottom
of the box. The meter indicates the percentage.
- It also displays a list of the tag- and
item-values at the top of the box. See dialog(3) for the tag
values.
- The text is shown as a caption between the list and
meter. The percent value denotes the initial percentage shown in
the meter.
- No provision is made for reading data from the standard
input as --gauge does.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. The
widget accepts no input, so the exit status is always OK.
-
--msgbox text height width
- A message box is very similar to a yes/no
box. The only difference between a message box and a yes/no
box is that a message box has only a single OK button. You
can use this dialog box to display any message you like. After reading the
message, the user can press the ENTER key so that dialog
will exit and the calling shell script can continue its operation.
- If the message is too large for the space, dialog
may allow you to scroll it, provided that the underlying curses
implementation is capable enough. In this case, a percentage is shown in
the base of the widget.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. Only
an “OK” button is provided for input, but an ESC exit status
may be returned.
-
--pause text height width seconds
- A pause box displays a meter along the bottom of the
box. The meter indicates how many seconds remain until the end of the
pause. The pause exits when timeout is reached or the user presses the OK
button (status OK) or the user presses the CANCEL button or Esc key.
-
--passwordbox text height width [init]
- A password box is similar to an input box, except
that the text the user enters is not displayed. This is useful when
prompting for passwords or other sensitive information. Be aware that if
anything is passed in “init”, it will be visible in the
system's process table to casual snoopers. Also, it is very confusing to
the user to provide them with a default password they cannot see. For
these reasons, using “init” is highly discouraged. See
“ --insecure” if you do not care about your
password.
- On exit, the input string will be printed on
dialog's output.
-
--passwordform text height width formheight [
label y x item y x flen ilen ] ...
-
This is identical to --form except that all text fields are treated
as password widgets rather than inputbox widgets.
-
--prgbox text command height width
-
--prgbox command height width
- A prgbox is very similar to a
programbox.
- This dialog box is used to display the output of a command
that is specified as an argument to prgbox.
- After the command completes, the user can press the
ENTER key so that dialog will exit and the calling shell
script can continue its operation.
- If four parameters are given, it displays the text under
the title, delineated from the scrolling file's contents. If only three
parameters are given, this text is omitted.
-
--programbox text height width
-
--programbox height width
- A programbox is very similar to a
progressbox. The only difference between a program box and a
progress box is that a program box displays an OK
button (but only after the command completes).
- This dialog box is used to display the piped output of a
command. After the command completes, the user can press the ENTER
key so that dialog will exit and the calling shell script can
continue its operation.
- If three parameters are given, it displays the text under
the title, delineated from the scrolling file's contents. If only two
parameters are given, this text is omitted.
-
--progressbox text height width
-
--progressbox height width
- A progressbox is similar to an tailbox,
except that
- a) rather than displaying the contents of a file,
- it displays the piped output of a command and
- b) it will exit when it reaches the end of the file
- (there is no “OK” button).
- If three parameters are given, it displays the text under
the title, delineated from the scrolling file's contents. If only two
parameters are given, this text is omitted.
-
--radiolist text height width list-height [
tag item status ] ...
- A radiolist box is similar to a menu box. The
only difference is that you can indicate which entry is currently
selected, by setting its status to on.
- On exit, the tag of the selected item is written to
dialog's output.
-
--rangebox text height width min-value max-value
default-value
-
Allow the user to select from a range of values, e.g., using a slider. The
dialog shows the current value as a bar (like the gauge dialog). Tabs or
arrow keys move the cursor between the buttons and the value. When the
cursor is on the value, you can edit it by:
- left/right cursor movement to select a digit to modify
- +/-
- characters to increment/decrement the digit by one
- 0 through 9
- to set the digit to the given value
- Some keys are also recognized in all cursor positions:
- home/end
- set the value to its maximum or minimum
- pageup/pagedown
- increment the value so that the slider moves by one
column
-
--tailbox file height width
- Display text from a file in a dialog box, as in a
“tail -f” command. Scroll left/right using vi-style 'h' and
'l', or arrow-keys. A '0' resets the scrolling.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. Only
an “OK” button is provided for input, but an ESC exit status
may be returned.
-
--tailboxbg file height width
- Display text from a file in a dialog box as a background
task, as in a “tail -f &” command. Scroll left/right
using vi-style 'h' and 'l', or arrow-keys. A '0' resets the
scrolling.
- Dialog treats the background task specially if there are
other widgets ( --and-widget) on the screen concurrently. Until
those widgets are closed (e.g., an “OK”), dialog will
perform all of the tailboxbg widgets in the same process, polling for
updates. You may use a tab to traverse between the widgets on the screen,
and close them individually, e.g., by pressing ENTER. Once the
non-tailboxbg widgets are closed, dialog forks a copy of itself
into the background, and prints its process id if the “
--no-kill” option is given.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. Only
an “EXIT” button is provided for input, but an ESC exit
status may be returned.
- NOTE: Older versions of dialog forked immediately
and attempted to update the screen individually. Besides being bad for
performance, it was unworkable. Some older scripts may not work properly
with the polled scheme.
-
--textbox file height width
- A text box lets you display the contents of a text
file in a dialog box. It is like a simple text file viewer. The user can
move through the file by using the cursor, page-up, page-down and
HOME/END keys available on most keyboards. If the lines are too
long to be displayed in the box, the LEFT/RIGHT keys can be used to
scroll the text region horizontally. You may also use vi-style keys h, j,
k, and l in place of the cursor keys, and B or N in place of the page-up
and page-down keys. Scroll up/down using vi-style 'k' and 'j', or
arrow-keys. Scroll left/right using vi-style 'h' and 'l', or arrow-keys. A
'0' resets the left/right scrolling. For more convenience, vi-style
forward and backward searching functions are also provided.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. Only
an “EXIT” button is provided for input, but an ESC exit
status may be returned.
-
--timebox text height [width hour minute
second]
- A dialog is displayed which allows you to select hour,
minute and second. If the values for hour, minute or second are missing or
negative, the current date's corresponding values are used. You can
increment or decrement any of those using the left-, up-, right- and
down-arrows. Use tab or backtab to move between windows.
- On exit, the result is printed in the form
hour:minute:second. The format can be overridden using the
--time-format option.
-
--treeview text height width list-height [
tag item status depth ] ...
- Display data organized as a tree. Each group of data
contains a tag, the text to display for the item, its status
(“on” or “off”) and the depth of the item in
the tree.
- Only one item can be selected (like the radiolist).
The tag is not displayed.
- On exit, the tag of the selected item is written to
dialog's output.
-
--yesno text height width
- A yes/no dialog box of size height rows by
width columns will be displayed. The string specified by
text is displayed inside the dialog box. If this string is too long
to fit in one line, it will be automatically divided into multiple lines
at appropriate places. The text string can also contain the
sub-string "\n" or newline characters `\n' to
control line breaking explicitly. This dialog box is useful for asking
questions that require the user to answer either yes or no. The dialog box
has a Yes button and a No button, in which the user can
switch between by pressing the TAB key.
- On exit, no text is written to dialog's output. In
addition to the “Yes” and “No” exit codes (see
DIAGNOSTICS) an ESC exit status may be returned.
- The codes used for “Yes” and
“No” match those used for “OK” and
“Cancel”, internally no distinction is made.
- --beep
- This was used to tell the original cdialog that it should
make a beep when the separate processes of the tailboxbg widget would
repaint the screen.
- --beep-after
- Beep after a user has completed a widget by pressing one of
the buttons.
These options can be used to transform whitespace (space, tab, newline) as
dialog reads the script:
--cr-wrap, --no-collapse,
--no-nl-expand, and --trim
The options are not independent:
- •
-
Dialog checks if the script contains at least one
“\n” and (unless --no-nl-expand is set) will ignore
the --no-collapse and --trim options.
- •
- After checking for “\n” and the
--no-nl-expand option, dialog handles the --trim
option.
- If the --trim option takes effect, then
dialog ignores --no-collapse. It changes sequences of tabs,
spaces (and newlines unless -cr-wrap is set) to a single
space.
- •
- If neither the “\n” or --trim cases
apply, dialog checks --no-collapse to decide whether to
reduce sequences of tabs and spaces to a single space.
- In this case, dialog ignores --cr-wrap and
does not modify newlines.
Taking those dependencies into account, here is a table summarizing the behavior
for the various combinations of options. The table assumes that the script
contains at least one “\n” when the
--no-nl-expand option
is not set.
cr- |
no- |
no- |
trim |
Result |
wrap |
collapse |
nl-expand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
no |
Convert tab to space. Convert newline to space. Convert
“\n” to newline. |
no |
no |
no |
yes |
Convert tab to space. Convert newline to space. Convert
“\n” to newline. |
no |
no |
yes |
no |
Convert tab to space. Do not convert newline to space. Convert
multiple-space to single. Show “\n” literally. |
no |
no |
yes |
yes |
Convert tab to space. Convert multiple-space to single. Convert newline
to space. Show “\n” literally. |
no |
yes |
no |
no |
Convert newline to space. Convert “\n” to newline. |
no |
yes |
no |
yes |
Convert newline to space. Convert “\n” to newline. |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
Do not convert newline to space. Do not reduce multiple blanks. Show
“\n” literally. |
no |
yes |
yes |
yes |
Convert multiple-space to single. Convert newline to space. Show
“\n” literally. |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
Convert tab to space. Wrap on newline. Convert “\n” to
newline. |
yes |
no |
no |
yes |
Convert tab to space. Wrap on newline. Convert “\n” to
newline. |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
Convert tab to space. Do not convert newline to space. Convert
multiple-space to single. Show “\n” literally. |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
Convert tab to space. Convert multiple-space to single. Wrap on newline.
Show “\n” literally. |
yes |
yes |
no |
no |
Wrap on newline. Convert “\n” to newline. |
yes |
yes |
no |
yes |
Wrap on newline. Convert “\n” to newline. |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
Do not convert newline to space. Do not reduce multiple blanks. Show
“\n” literally. |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
Convert multiple-space to single. Wrap on newline. Show
“\n” literally. |
- 1.
- Create a sample configuration file by typing:
- 2.
- At start, dialog determines the settings to use as
follows:
- a)
- if environment variable DIALOGRC is set, its value
determines the name of the configuration file.
- b)
- if the file in (a) is not found, use the file
$HOME/.dialogrc as the configuration file.
- c)
- if the file in (b) is not found, try using the GLOBALRC
file determined at compile-time, i.e., /etc/dialogrc.
- d)
- if the file in (c) is not found, use compiled in
defaults.
- 3.
- Edit the sample configuration file and copy it to some
place that dialog can find, as stated in step 2 above.
You can override or add to key bindings in
dialog by adding to the
configuration file.
Dialog's
bindkey command maps single keys to
its internal coding.
bindkey widget curses_key dialog_key
The
widget name can be “*” (all widgets), or specific
widgets such as
textbox. Specific widget bindings override the
“*” bindings. User-defined bindings override the built-in
bindings.
The
curses_key can be expressed in different forms:
- •
- It may be any of the names derived from curses.h,
e.g., “HELP” from “KEY_HELP”.
- •
-
Dialog also recognizes ANSI control characters such
as “^A”, “^?”, as well as C1-controls such as
“~A” and “~?”.
- •
- Finally, dialog allows backslash escapes as in C.
Those can be octal character values such as “\033” (the
ASCII escape character), or the characters listed in this table:
Escaped |
Actual |
|
|
\b |
backspace |
\f |
form feed |
\n |
new line (line feed) |
\r |
carriage return |
\s |
space |
\t |
tab |
\^ |
“^” (caret) |
\? |
“?” (question mark) |
\\ |
“\” (backslash) |
|
Dialog's internal keycode names correspond to the
DLG_KEYS_ENUM
type in
dlg_keys.h, e.g., “HELP” from
“DLGK_HELP”.
Some widgets (such as the formbox) have an area where fields can be edited.
Those are managed in a subwindow of the widget, and may have separate
keybindings from the main widget because the subwindows are registered using a
different name.
Widget |
Window name |
Subwindow Name |
|
|
|
calendar |
calendar |
|
checklist |
checklist |
|
editbox |
editbox |
editbox2 |
form |
formbox |
formfield |
fselect |
fselect |
fselect2 |
inputbox |
inputbox |
inputbox2 |
menu |
menubox |
menu |
msgbox |
msgbox |
|
pause |
pause |
|
progressbox |
progressbox |
|
radiolist |
radiolist |
|
tailbox |
tailbox |
|
textbox |
textbox |
searchbox |
timebox |
timebox |
|
yesno |
yesno |
|
|
Some widgets are actually other widgets, using internal settings to modify the
behavior. Those use the same widget name as the actual widget:
Widget |
Actual Widget |
|
|
dselect |
fselect |
infobox |
msgbox |
inputmenu |
menu |
mixedform |
form |
passwordbox |
inputbox |
passwordform |
form |
prgbox |
progressbox |
programbox |
progressbox |
tailboxbg |
tailbox |
|
This manual page does not list the key bindings for each widget, because that
detailed information can be obtained by running
dialog. If you have set
the
--trace option,
dialog writes the key-binding information
for each widget as it is registered.
A few bindings are built-in, independent of particular widgets:
Key |
Purpose |
|
|
Control-I |
forward tab-traversal, e.g., with --tailboxbg. |
Control-L |
repaints the screen. |
Control-T |
writes a screen dump to the --trace file. |
Control-V |
suppresses special-keys for the next input byte. |
DLGK_FIELD_NEXT |
forward tab-traversal, like Control-I. |
DLGK_FIELD_PREV |
backward tab-traversal, like back-tab. |
DLGK_HELPFILE |
displays the help-file specified with --hfile. |
KEY_BTAB |
backward tab-traversal, e.g., with --tailboxbg. |
|
Normally
dialog uses different keys for navigating between the buttons
and editing part of a dialog versus navigating within the editing part. That
is, tab (and back-tab) traverse buttons (or between buttons and the editing
part), while arrow keys traverse fields within the editing part. Tabs are also
recognized as a special case for traversing between widgets, e.g., when using
multiple tailboxbg widgets.
Some users may wish to use the same key for traversing within the editing part
as for traversing between buttons. The form widget is written to support this
sort of redefinition of the keys, by adding a special group in
dlgk_keys.h for “form” (left/right/next/prev). Here is an
example binding demonstrating how to do this:
bindkey formfield TAB form_NEXT
bindkey formbox TAB form_NEXT
bindkey formfield BTAB form_prev
bindkey formbox BTAB form_prev
That type of redefinition would not be useful in other widgets, e.g., calendar,
due to the potentially large number of fields to traverse.
- DIALOGOPTS
- Define this variable to apply any of the common options to
each widget. Most of the common options are reset before processing each
widget. If you set the options in this environment variable, they are
applied to dialog's state after the reset. As in the “
--file” option, double-quotes and backslashes are
interpreted.
- The “--file” option is not considered
a common option (so you cannot embed it within this environment
variable).
- DIALOGRC
- Define this variable if you want to specify the name of the
configuration file to use.
- DIALOG_CANCEL
- DIALOG_ERROR
- DIALOG_ESC
- DIALOG_EXTRA
- DIALOG_HELP
- DIALOG_ITEM_HELP
- DIALOG_TIMEOUT
- DIALOG_OK
- Define any of these variables to change the exit code
on
- •
- Cancel (1),
- •
- error (-1),
- •
- ESC (255),
- •
- Extra (3),
- •
- Help (2),
- •
- Help with --item-help (2),
- •
- Timeout (5), or
- •
- OK (0).
- Normally shell scripts cannot distinguish between -1 and
255.
- DIALOG_TTY
- Set this variable to “1” to provide
compatibility with older versions of dialog which assumed that if
the script redirects the standard output, that the “
--stdout” option was given.
- $HOME/.dialogrc
- default configuration file
The
dialog sources contain several samples of how to use the different
box options and how they look. Just take a look into the directory
samples/ of the source.
Exit status is subject to being overridden by environment variables. The default
values and corresponding environment variables that can override them are:
- 0
- if the YES or OK button is pressed
(DIALOG_OK).
- 1
- if the No or Cancel button is pressed
(DIALOG_CANCEL).
- 2
- if the Help button is pressed (DIALOG_HELP),
except as noted below about DIALOG_ITEM_HELP.
- 3
- if the Extra button is pressed (DIALOG_EXTRA).
- 4
- if the Help button is pressed,
and the --item-help option is set
and the DIALOG_ITEM_HELP environment variable is set to 4.
- While any of the exit-codes can be overridden using
environment variables, this special case was introduced in 2004 to
simplify compatibility. Dialog uses DIALOG_ITEM_HELP (4)
internally, but unless the environment variable is also set, it changes
that to DIALOG_HELP (2) on exit.
- 5
- if a timeout expires and the DIALOG_TIMEOUT variable
is set to 5.
- -1
- if errors occur inside dialog (DIALOG_ERROR) or
dialog exits because the ESC key (DIALOG_ESC) was
pressed.
Dialog works with X/Open curses. However, some implementations have
deficiencies:
- •
- HPUX curses (and perhaps others) do not open the terminal
properly for the newterm function. This interferes with
dialog's --input-fd option, by preventing cursor-keys and
similar escape sequences from being recognized.
- •
- NetBSD 5.1 curses has incomplete support for
wide-characters. dialog will build, but not all examples display
properly.
You may want to write scripts which run with other
dialog
“clones”.
First, there is the “original”
dialog program to consider
(versions 0.3 to 0.9). It had some misspelled (or inconsistent) options. The
dialog program maps those deprecated options to the preferred ones.
They include:
Option |
Treatment |
|
|
--beep-after |
ignored |
--guage |
mapped to --gauge
|
|
This is an X application, rather than a terminal program. With some care, it is
possible to write useful scripts that work with both
Xdialog and
dialog.
The
dialog program ignores these options which are recognized by
Xdialog:
Option |
Treatment |
|
|
--allow-close |
ignored |
--auto-placement |
ignored |
--fixed-font |
ignored |
--icon |
ignored |
--keep-colors |
ignored |
--no-close |
ignored |
--no-cr-wrap |
ignored |
--screen-center |
ignored |
--separator |
mapped to --separate-output
|
--smooth |
ignored |
--under-mouse |
ignored |
--wmclass |
ignored |
|
Xdialog's manpage has a section discussing its compatibility with
dialog. There are some differences not shown in the manpage. For
example, the html documentation states
Note: former Xdialog releases used the “\n” (line feed) as a
results separator for the checklist widget; this has been changed to
“/” in Xdialog v1.5.0 to make it compatible with (c)dialog. In
your old scripts using the Xdialog checklist, you will then have to add the
--separate-output option before the
--checklist one.
Dialog has not used a different separator; the difference was likely due
to confusion regarding some script.
Then there is
whiptail. For practical purposes, it is maintained by
Debian (very little work is done by its upstream developers). Its
documentation (README.whiptail) claims
whiptail(1) is a lightweight replacement for ,
to provide dialog boxes for shell scripts.
It is built on the
newt windowing library rather than the ncurses library, allowing
it to be smaller in embedded environments such as installers,
rescue disks, etc.
whiptail is designed to be drop-in compatible with dialog, but
has less features: some dialog boxes are not implemented, such
as tailbox, timebox, calendarbox, etc.
Comparing actual sizes (Debian testing, 2007/1/10): The total of sizes for
whiptail, the newt, popt and slang libraries is 757 KB. The
comparable number for
dialog (counting ncurses) is 520 KB.
Disregard the first paragraph.
The second paragraph is misleading, since
whiptail also does not work for
common options of
dialog, such as the gauge box.
whiptail is
less compatible with
dialog than the original mid-1990s dialog 0.4
program.
whiptail's manpage borrows features from
dialog, e.g., but oddly
cites only
dialog versions up to 0.4 (1994) as a source. That is, its
manpage refers to features which were borrowed from more recent versions of
dialog, e.g.,
- •
-
--gauge (from 0.5)
- •
-
--passwordbox (from Debian changes in 1999),
- •
-
--default-item (from dialog 2000/02/22),
- •
-
--output-fd (from dialog 2002/08/14).
Debian uses
whiptail for the official
dialog variation.
The
dialog program ignores or maps these options which are recognized by
whiptail:
Option |
Treatment |
|
|
--cancel-button |
mapped to --cancel-label
|
--fb |
ignored |
--fullbutton |
ignored |
--no-button |
mapped to --no-label
|
--nocancel |
mapped to --no-cancel
|
--noitem |
mapped to --no-items
|
--notags |
mapped to --no-tags
|
--ok-button |
mapped to --ok-label
|
--scrolltext |
mapped to --scrollbar
|
--topleft |
mapped to --begin 0 0
|
--yes-button |
mapped to --yes-label
|
|
There are visual differences which are not addressed by command-line options:
- •
-
dialog centers lists within the window.
whiptail typically puts lists against the left margin.
- •
-
whiptail uses angle brackets (“<”
and “>”) for marking buttons. dialog uses square
brackets.
- •
-
whiptail marks the limits of subtitles with vertical
bars. dialog does not mark the limits.
- •
-
whiptail attempts to mark the top/bottom cells of a
scrollbar with up/down arrows. When it cannot do this, it fills those
cells with the background color of the scrollbar and confusing the user.
dialog uses the entire scrollbar space, thereby getting better
resolution.
Perhaps.
Thomas E. Dickey (updates for 0.9b and beyond)
Kiran Cherupally – the mixed form and mixed gauge widgets.
Tobias C. Rittweiler
Valery Reznic – the form and progressbox widgets.
Yura Kalinichenko adapted the gauge widget as “pause”.
This is a rewrite (except as needed to provide compatibility) of the earlier
version of
dialog 0.9a, which lists as authors:
- •
- Savio Lam – version 0.3, “dialog”
- •
- Stuart Herbert – patch for version 0.4
- •
- Marc Ewing – the gauge widget.
- •
- Pasquale De Marco “Pako” – version
0.9a, “cdialog”