tui
Here are 555 public repositories matching this topic...
-
Updated
Sep 5, 2020 - C
-
Updated
Apr 12, 2020 - Go
-
Updated
Mar 11, 2020 - Python
Is your feature request related to a problem? Please describe.
I would like for an effect to render text (or ASCII characters) from left to right, like it's being typed out.
Describe the solution you'd like
Similar to the mirage effect (where text can be rendered one character at a time, only randomly), it would be cool to have text rendered one letter at a time from left to right, so
Vertical barcharts
-
Updated
Aug 15, 2020 - Python
First: is this a bug report? A suggestion? Or asking for help? Bug report/suggestion
Problem description
For a &mut ProgressBar, there are no methods to set its min and max values. The only methods to change their values (min(self, usize), max(self, usize)) take ownership of the ProgressBar, which is not possible if you have a reference.
Workaround: to gain ownership, create a
Balance sheet column headings should be the column's end date:
Balance Sheet 2020-07-03
|| 2020-07-03
======================================++==============================================
But in the HTML output, it seems to be a date range instead:
Bala |
|---|
-
Updated
Sep 4, 2020 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Aug 28, 2020 - Rust
-
Updated
Sep 9, 2020 - C
When your account has TFA enabled, discord needs you to supply a valid TFA token in order to change your account password. This could simply be done by a prompt if session.MFA is set to true.
-
Updated
Aug 27, 2020 - Rust
-
Updated
Sep 2, 2020 - Go
-
Updated
Sep 11, 2020 - Rust
Improve this page
Add a description, image, and links to the tui topic page so that developers can more easily learn about it.
Add this topic to your repo
To associate your repository with the tui topic, visit your repo's landing page and select "manage topics."


It would be nice if one could document how the x and y coordinates are defined. (Beginners might not know about it and well the more documentation the better).
What I think when I see x and y:
What it actually is: