π React for interactive command-line apps
https://github.com/vadimdemedes/ink.git
React for CLIs. Build and test your CLI output using components.
Ink provides the same component-based UI building experience that React offers in the browser, but for command-line apps. It uses Yoga to build Flexbox layouts in the terminal, so most CSS-like properties are available in Ink as well. If you are already familiar with React, you already know Ink.
Since Ink is a React renderer, all features of React are supported. Head over to the React website for documentation on how to use it. Only Ink's methods are documented in this readme.
npm install ink react
[!NOTE]
This readme documents the upcoming version of Ink. For the latest stable release, see Ink on npm.
import React, {useState, useEffect} from 'react';
import {render, Text} from 'ink';
const Counter = () => {
const [counter, setCounter] = useState(0);
useEffect(() => {
const timer = setInterval(() => {
setCounter(previousCounter => previousCounter + 1);
}, 100);
return () => {
clearInterval(timer);
};
}, []);
return <Text color="green">{counter} tests passed</Text>;
};
render(<Counter />);
kyt - a toolkit that encapsulates and manages the configuration for web apps.node_modules directories to free up disk space.useCursorUse create-ink-app to quickly scaffold a new Ink-based CLI.
npx create-ink-app my-ink-cli
Alternatively, create a TypeScript project:
npx create-ink-app --typescript my-ink-cli
Ink requires the same Babel setup as you would do for regular React-based apps in the browser. Set up Babel with a React preset to ensure all examples in this readme work as expected.
After installing Babel, install Manual JavaScript setup
@babel/preset-react and insert the following configuration in babel.config.json:npm install --save-dev @babel/preset-react
{
"presets": ["@babel/preset-react"]
}
Next, create a file source.js, where you'll type code that uses Ink:
import React from 'react';
import {render, Text} from 'ink';
const Demo = () => <Text>Hello World</Text>;
render(<Demo />);
Then, transpile this file with Babel:
npx babel source.js -o cli.js
Now you can run cli.js with Node.js:
node cli
If you don't like transpiling files during development, you can use import-jsx or @esbuild-kit/esm-loader to import a JSX file and transpile it on the fly.
Ink uses Yoga, a Flexbox layout engine, to build great user interfaces for your CLIs using familiar CSS-like properties you've used when building apps for the browser.
It's important to remember that each element is a Flexbox container.
Think of it as if every <div> in the browser had display: flex.
See <Box> built-in component below for documentation on how to use Flexbox layouts in Ink.
Note that all text must be wrapped in a <Text> component.
An Ink app is a Node.js process, so it stays alive only while there is active work in the event loop (timers, pending promises, useInput listening on stdin, etc.). If your component tree has no async work, the app will render once and exit immediately.
To exit the app, press Ctrl+C (enabled by default via exitOnCtrlC), call exit() from useApp inside a component, or call unmount() on the object returned by render().
Use waitUntilExit() to run code after the app is unmounted:
const {waitUntilExit} = render(<MyApp />);
await waitUntilExit();
console.log('App exited');
<Text>This component can display text and change its style to make it bold, underlined, italic, or strikethrough.
import {render, Text} from 'ink';
const Example = () => (
<>
<Text color="green">I am green</Text>
<Text color="black" backgroundColor="white">
I am black on white
</Text>
<Text color="#ffffff">I am white</Text>
<Text bold>I am bold</Text>
<Text italic>I am italic</Text>
<Text underline>I am underline</Text>
<Text strikethrough>I am strikethrough</Text>
<Text inverse>I am inversed</Text>
</>
);
render(<Example />);
[!NOTE]<Text>allows only text nodes and nested<Text>components inside of it. For example,<Box>component can't be used inside<Text>.
Type: string
Change text color. Ink uses chalk under the hood, so all its functionality is supported.
<Text color="green">Green</Text>
<Text color="#005cc5">Blue</Text>
<Text color="rgb(232, 131, 136)">Red</Text>
Type: string
Same as color above, but for background.
<Text backgroundColor="green" color="white">Green</Text>
<Text backgroundColor="#005cc5" color="white">Blue</Text>
<Text backgroundColor="rgb(232, 131, 136)" color="white">Red</Text>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Dim the color (make it less bright).
<Text color="red" dimColor>
Dimmed Red
</Text>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Make the text bold.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Make the text italic.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Make the text underlined.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Make the text crossed with a line.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Invert background and foreground colors.
<Text inverse color="yellow">
Inversed Yellow
</Text>
Type: string\
Allowed values: wrap truncate truncate-start truncate-middle truncate-end\
Default: wrap
This property tells Ink to wrap or truncate text if its width is larger than the container.
If wrap is passed (the default), Ink will wrap text and split it into multiple lines.
If truncate-* is passed, Ink will truncate text instead, resulting in one line of text with the rest cut off.
<Box width={7}>
<Text>Hello World</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'Hello\nWorld'
// `truncate` is an alias to `truncate-end`
<Box width={7}>
<Text wrap="truncate">Hello World</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'Helloβ¦'
<Box width={7}>
<Text wrap="truncate-middle">Hello World</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'Heβ¦ld'
<Box width={7}>
<Text wrap="truncate-start">Hello World</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'β¦World'
<Box><Box> is an essential Ink component to build your layout.
It's like <div style="display: flex"> in the browser.
import {render, Box, Text} from 'ink';
const Example = () => (
<Box margin={2}>
<Text>This is a box with margin</Text>
</Box>
);
render(<Example />);
Type: number string
Width of the element in spaces. You can also set it as a percentage, which will calculate the width based on the width of the parent element.
<Box width={4}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'X '
<Box width={10}>
<Box width="50%">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'X Y'
Type: number string
Height of the element in lines (rows). You can also set it as a percentage, which will calculate the height based on the height of the parent element.
<Box height={4}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'X\n\n\n'
<Box height={6} flexDirection="column">
<Box height="50%">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'X\n\n\nY\n\n'
Type: number
Sets a minimum width of the element. Percentages aren't supported yet; see https://github.com/facebook/yoga/issues/872.
Type: number string
Sets a minimum height of the element in lines (rows). You can also set it as a percentage, which will calculate the minimum height based on the height of the parent element.
Type: number
Sets a maximum width of the element. Percentages aren't supported yet; see https://github.com/facebook/yoga/issues/872.
Type: number string
Sets a maximum height of the element in lines (rows). You can also set it as a percentage, which will calculate the maximum height based on the height of the parent element.
Type: number
Defines the aspect ratio (width/height) for the element.
Use it with at least one size constraint (width, height, minHeight, or maxHeight) so Ink can derive the missing dimension.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Top padding.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Bottom padding.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Left padding.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Right padding.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Horizontal padding. Equivalent to setting paddingLeft and paddingRight.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Vertical padding. Equivalent to setting paddingTop and paddingBottom.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Padding on all sides. Equivalent to setting paddingTop, paddingBottom, paddingLeft and paddingRight.
<Box paddingTop={2}><Text>Top</Text></Box>
<Box paddingBottom={2}><Text>Bottom</Text></Box>
<Box paddingLeft={2}><Text>Left</Text></Box>
<Box paddingRight={2}><Text>Right</Text></Box>
<Box paddingX={2}><Text>Left and right</Text></Box>
<Box paddingY={2}><Text>Top and bottom</Text></Box>
<Box padding={2}><Text>Top, bottom, left and right</Text></Box>
Type: number\
Default: 0
Top margin.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Bottom margin.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Left margin.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Right margin.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Horizontal margin. Equivalent to setting marginLeft and marginRight.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Vertical margin. Equivalent to setting marginTop and marginBottom.
Type: number\
Default: 0
Margin on all sides. Equivalent to setting marginTop, marginBottom, marginLeft and marginRight.
<Box marginTop={2}><Text>Top</Text></Box>
<Box marginBottom={2}><Text>Bottom</Text></Box>
<Box marginLeft={2}><Text>Left</Text></Box>
<Box marginRight={2}><Text>Right</Text></Box>
<Box marginX={2}><Text>Left and right</Text></Box>
<Box marginY={2}><Text>Top and bottom</Text></Box>
<Box margin={2}><Text>Top, bottom, left and right</Text></Box>
Type: number\
Default: 0
Size of the gap between an element's columns and rows. A shorthand for columnGap and rowGap.
<Box gap={1} width={3} flexWrap="wrap">
<Text>A</Text>
<Text>B</Text>
<Text>C</Text>
</Box>
// A B
//
// C
Type: number\
Default: 0
Size of the gap between an element's columns.
<Box columnGap={1}>
<Text>A</Text>
<Text>B</Text>
</Box>
// A B
Type: number\
Default: 0
Size of the gap between an element's rows.
<Box flexDirection="column" rowGap={1}>
<Text>A</Text>
<Text>B</Text>
</Box>
// A
//
// B
Type: number\
Default: 0
See flex-grow.
<Box>
<Text>Label:</Text>
<Box flexGrow={1}>
<Text>Fills all remaining space</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
Type: number\
Default: 1
See flex-shrink.
<Box width={20}>
<Box flexShrink={2} width={10}>
<Text>Will be 1/4</Text>
</Box>
<Box width={10}>
<Text>Will be 3/4</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
Type: number string
See flex-basis.
<Box width={6}>
<Box flexBasis={3}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'X Y'
<Box width={6}>
<Box flexBasis="50%">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
//=> 'X Y'
Type: string\
Allowed values: row row-reverse column column-reverse
See flex-direction.
<Box>
<Box marginRight={1}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
// X Y
<Box flexDirection="row-reverse">
<Text>X</Text>
<Box marginRight={1}>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
// Y X
<Box flexDirection="column">
<Text>X</Text>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
// X
// Y
<Box flexDirection="column-reverse">
<Text>X</Text>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
// Y
// X
Type: string\
Allowed values: nowrap wrap wrap-reverse
See flex-wrap.
<Box width={2} flexWrap="wrap">
<Text>A</Text>
<Text>BC</Text>
</Box>
// A
// B C
<Box flexDirection="column" height={2} flexWrap="wrap">
<Text>A</Text>
<Text>B</Text>
<Text>C</Text>
</Box>
// A C
// B
Type: string\
Allowed values: flex-start center flex-end stretch baseline
See align-items.
<Box alignItems="flex-start">
<Box marginRight={1}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>
A
<Newline/>
B
<Newline/>
C
</Text>
</Box>
// X A
// B
// C
<Box alignItems="center">
<Box marginRight={1}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>
A
<Newline/>
B
<Newline/>
C
</Text>
</Box>
// A
// X B
// C
<Box alignItems="flex-end">
<Box marginRight={1}>
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
<Text>
A
<Newline/>
B
<Newline/>
C
</Text>
</Box>
// A
// B
// X C
Type: string\
Default: auto\
Allowed values: auto flex-start center flex-end stretch baseline
See align-self.
<Box height={3}>
<Box alignSelf="flex-start">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
// X
//
//
<Box height={3}>
<Box alignSelf="center">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
//
// X
//
<Box height={3}>
<Box alignSelf="flex-end">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
//
//
// X
Type: string\
Default: flex-start\
Allowed values: flex-start flex-end center stretch space-between space-around space-evenly
Defines alignment between flex lines on the cross axis when flexWrap creates multiple lines.
See align-content.
Unlike CSS (stretch), Ink defaults to flex-start so wrapped lines stay compact and fixed-height boxes don't gain unexpected empty rows unless you opt in to stretching.
Type: string\
Allowed values: flex-start center flex-end space-between space-around space-evenly
See justify-content.
<Box justifyContent="flex-start">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
// [X ]
<Box justifyContent="center">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
// [ X ]
<Box justifyContent="flex-end">
<Text>X</Text>
</Box>
// [ X]
<Box justifyContent="space-between">
<Text>X</Text>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
// [X Y]
<Box justifyContent="space-around">
<Text>X</Text>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
// [ X Y ]
<Box justifyContent="space-evenly">
<Text>X</Text>
<Text>Y</Text>
</Box>
// [ X Y ]
Type: string\
Allowed values: relative absolute static\
Default: relative
Controls how the element is positioned.
When position is static, top, right, bottom, and left are ignored.
Type: number string
Top offset for positioned elements. You can also set it as a percentage of the parent size.
Type: number string
Right offset for positioned elements. You can also set it as a percentage of the parent size.
Type: number string
Bottom offset for positioned elements. You can also set it as a percentage of the parent size.
Type: number string
Left offset for positioned elements. You can also set it as a percentage of the parent size.
Type: string\
Allowed values: flex none\
Default: flex
Set this property to none to hide the element.
Type: string\
Allowed values: visible hidden\
Default: visible
Behavior for an element's overflow in the horizontal direction.
Type: string\
Allowed values: visible hidden\
Default: visible
Behavior for an element's overflow in the vertical direction.
Type: string\
Allowed values: visible hidden\
Default: visible
A shortcut for setting overflowX and overflowY at the same time.
Type: string\
Allowed values: single double round bold singleDouble doubleSingle classic | BoxStyle
Add a border with a specified style.
If borderStyle is undefined (the default), no border will be added.
Ink uses border styles from the cli-boxes module.
<Box flexDirection="column">
<Box>
<Box borderStyle="single" marginRight={2}>
<Text>single</Text>
</Box>
<Box borderStyle="double" marginRight={2}>
<Text>double</Text>
</Box>
<Box borderStyle="round" marginRight={2}>
<Text>round</Text>
</Box>
<Box borderStyle="bold">
<Text>bold</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
<Box marginTop={1}>
<Box borderStyle="singleDouble" marginRight={2}>
<Text>singleDouble</Text>
</Box>
<Box borderStyle="doubleSingle" marginRight={2}>
<Text>doubleSingle</Text>
</Box>
<Box borderStyle="classic">
<Text>classic</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
</Box>
Alternatively, pass a custom border style like so:
<Box
borderStyle={{
topLeft: 'β',
top: 'β',
topRight: 'β',
left: 'β',
bottomLeft: 'β',
bottom: 'β',
bottomRight: 'β',
right: 'β'
}}
>
<Text>Custom</Text>
</Box>
See example in examples/borders.
Type: string
Change border color.
A shorthand for setting borderTopColor, borderRightColor, borderBottomColor, and borderLeftColor.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderColor="green">
<Text>Green Rounded Box</Text>
</Box>
Type: string
Change top border color.
Accepts the same values as color in <Text> component.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderTopColor="green">
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: string
Change the right border color.
Accepts the same values as color in <Text> component.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderRightColor="green">
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: string
Change the bottom border color.
Accepts the same values as color in <Text> component.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderBottomColor="green">
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: string
Change the left border color.
Accepts the same values as color in <Text> component.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderLeftColor="green">
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Dim the border color.
A shorthand for setting borderTopDimColor, borderBottomDimColor, borderLeftDimColor, and borderRightDimColor.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderDimColor>
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Dim the top border color.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderTopDimColor>
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Dim the bottom border color.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderBottomDimColor>
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Dim the left border color.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderLeftDimColor>
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Dim the right border color.
<Box borderStyle="round" borderRightDimColor>
<Text>Hello world</Text>
</Box>
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Determines whether the top border is visible.
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Determines whether the right border is visible.
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Determines whether the bottom border is visible.
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Determines whether the left border is visible.
Type: string
Background color for the element.
Accepts the same values as color in the <Text> component.
<Box flexDirection="column">
<Box backgroundColor="red" width={20} height={5} alignSelf="flex-start">
<Text>Red background</Text>
</Box>
<Box backgroundColor="#FF8800" width={20} height={3} marginTop={1} alignSelf="flex-start">
<Text>Orange background</Text>
</Box>
<Box backgroundColor="rgb(0, 255, 0)" width={20} height={3} marginTop={1} alignSelf="flex-start">
<Text>Green background</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
The background color fills the entire <Box> area and is inherited by child <Text> components unless they specify their own backgroundColor.
<Box backgroundColor="blue" alignSelf="flex-start">
<Text>Blue inherited </Text>
<Text backgroundColor="yellow">Yellow override </Text>
<Text>Blue inherited again</Text>
</Box>
Background colors work with borders and padding:
<Box backgroundColor="cyan" borderStyle="round" padding={1} alignSelf="flex-start">
<Text>Background with border and padding</Text>
</Box>
See example in examples/box-backgrounds.
<Newline>Adds one or more newline (\n) characters.
Must be used within <Text> components.
Type: number\
Default: 1
Number of newlines to insert.
import {render, Text, Newline} from 'ink';
const Example = () => (
<Text>
<Text color="green">Hello</Text>
<Newline />
<Text color="red">World</Text>
</Text>
);
render(<Example />);
Output:
Hello
World
<Spacer>A flexible space that expands along the major axis of its containing layout. It's useful as a shortcut for filling all the available space between elements.
For example, using <Spacer> in a <Box> with default flex direction (row) will position "Left" on the left side and will push "Right" to the right side.
import {render, Box, Text, Spacer} from 'ink';
const Example = () => (
<Box>
<Text>Left</Text>
<Spacer />
<Text>Right</Text>
</Box>
);
render(<Example />);
In a vertical flex direction (column), it will position "Top" at the top of the container and push "Bottom" to the bottom.
Note that the container needs to be tall enough to see this in effect.
import {render, Box, Text, Spacer} from 'ink';
const Example = () => (
<Box flexDirection="column" height={10}>
<Text>Top</Text>
<Spacer />
<Text>Bottom</Text>
</Box>
);
render(<Example />);
<Static><Static> component permanently renders its output above everything else.
It's useful for displaying activity like completed tasks or logs - things that
don't change after they're rendered (hence the name "Static").
It's preferred to use <Static> for use cases like these when you can't know
or control the number of items that need to be rendered.
For example, Tap uses <Static> to display
a list of completed tests. Gatsby uses it
to display a list of generated pages while still displaying a live progress bar.
import React, {useState, useEffect} from 'react';
import {render, Static, Box, Text} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const [tests, setTests] = useState([]);
useEffect(() => {
let completedTests = 0;
let timer;
const run = () => {
// Fake 10 completed tests
if (completedTests++ < 10) {
setTests(previousTests => [
...previousTests,
{
id: previousTests.length,
title: `Test #${previousTests.length + 1}`
}
]);
timer = setTimeout(run, 100);
}
};
run();
return () => {
clearTimeout(timer);
};
}, []);
return (
<>
{/* This part will be rendered once to the terminal */}
<Static items={tests}>
{test => (
<Box key={test.id}>
<Text color="green">β {test.title}</Text>
</Box>
)}
</Static>
{/* This part keeps updating as state changes */}
<Box marginTop={1}>
<Text dimColor>Completed tests: {tests.length}</Text>
</Box>
</>
);
};
render(<Example />);
[!NOTE]that were previously rendered. This means that when you add new items to the<Static>only renders new items in theitemsprop and ignores items
items
array, changes you make to previous items will not trigger a rerender.
See examples/static for an example usage of <Static> component.
Type: Array
Array of items of any type to render using the function you pass as a component child.
Type: object
Styles to apply to a container of child elements.
See <Box> for supported properties.
<Static items={...} style={{padding: 1}}>
{...}
</Static>
Type: Function
Function that is called to render every item in the items array.
The first argument is the item itself, and the second argument is the index of that item in the
items array.
Note that a key must be assigned to the root component.
<Static items={['a', 'b', 'c']}>
{(item, index) => {
// This function is called for every item in ['a', 'b', 'c']
// `item` is 'a', 'b', 'c'
// `index` is 0, 1, 2
return (
<Box key={index}>
<Text>Item: {item}</Text>
</Box>
);
}}
</Static>
<Transform>Transform a string representation of React components before they're written to output.
For example, you might want to apply a gradient to text, add a clickable link, or create some text effects.
These use cases can't accept React nodes as input; they expect a string.
That's what the <Transform> component does: it gives you an output string of its child components and lets you transform it in any way.
[!NOTE]<Transform>must be applied only to<Text>children components and shouldn't change the dimensions of the output; otherwise, the layout will be incorrect.
[!IMPORTANT]
When children use<Text>styling props (e.g.color,bold), the string passed totransformwill contain ANSI escape codes. If your transform manipulates whitespace or does string operations like.trim(), you may need to use ANSI-aware methods (e.g. fromslice-ansiorstrip-ansi).
import {render, Transform} from 'ink';
const Example = () => (
<Transform transform={output => output.toUpperCase()}>
<Text>Hello World</Text>
</Transform>
);
render(<Example />);
Since the transform function converts all characters to uppercase, the final output rendered to the terminal will be "HELLO WORLD", not "Hello World".
When the output wraps to multiple lines, it can be helpful to know which line is being processed.
For example, to implement a hanging indent component, you can indent all the lines except for the first.
import {render, Transform} from 'ink';
const HangingIndent = ({indent = 4, children}) => (
<Transform
transform={(line, index) =>
index === 0 ? line : ' '.repeat(indent) + line
}
>
{children}
</Transform>
);
const text =
'WHEN I WROTE the following pages, or rather the bulk of them, ' +
'I lived alone, in the woods, a mile from any neighbor, in a ' +
'house which I had built myself, on the shore of Walden Pond, ' +
'in Concord, Massachusetts, and earned my living by the labor ' +
'of my hands only. I lived there two years and two months. At ' +
'present I am a sojourner in civilized life again.';
render(
<HangingIndent indent={4}>
{text}
</HangingIndent>
);
Type: Function
Function that transforms children output. It accepts children and must return transformed children as well.
Type: string
Output of child components.
Type: number
The zero-indexed line number of the line that's currently being transformed.
A React hook that returns void and handles user input.
It's a more convenient alternative to using useStdin and listening for data events.
The callback you pass to useInput is called for each character when the user enters any input.
However, if the user pastes text and it's more than one character, the callback will be called only once, and the whole string will be passed as input.
You can find a full example of using useInput at examples/use-input.
import {useInput} from 'ink';
const UserInput = () => {
useInput((input, key) => {
if (input === 'q') {
// Exit program
}
if (key.leftArrow) {
// Left arrow key pressed
}
});
return β¦
};
Type: Function
The handler function that you pass to useInput receives two arguments:
Type: string
The input that the program received.
Type: object
Handy information about a key that was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
If an arrow key was pressed, the corresponding property will be true.
For example, if the user presses the left arrow key, key.leftArrow equals true.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Return (Enter) key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Escape key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Ctrl key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Shift key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Tab key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Backspace key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Delete key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
If the Page Up or Page Down key was pressed, the corresponding property will be true.
For example, if the user presses Page Down, key.pageDown equals true.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
If the Home or End key was pressed, the corresponding property will be true.
For example, if the user presses End, key.end equals true.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Meta key was pressed.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Super key (Cmd on macOS, Win on Windows) was pressed. Requires kitty keyboard protocol.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Hyper key was pressed. Requires kitty keyboard protocol.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Caps Lock was active. Requires kitty keyboard protocol.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Num Lock was active. Requires kitty keyboard protocol.
Type: 'press' | 'repeat' | 'release'\
Default: undefined
The type of key event. Only available with kitty keyboard protocol. Without the protocol, this property is undefined.
Type: object
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Enable or disable capturing of user input.
Useful when there are multiple useInput hooks used at once to avoid handling the same input several times.
A React hook that calls handler whenever the user pastes text. Bracketed paste mode (\x1b[?2004h) is automatically enabled while the hook is active, so pasted text arrives as a single string rather than being misinterpreted as individual key presses.
usePaste and useInput can be used together in the same component. They operate on separate event channels, so paste content is never forwarded to useInput handlers when usePaste is active.
import {useInput, usePaste} from 'ink';
const MyInput = () => {
useInput((input, key) => {
// Only receives typed characters and key events, not pasted text.
if (key.return) {
// Submit
}
});
usePaste((text) => {
// Receives the full pasted string, including newlines.
console.log('Pasted:', text);
});
return β¦
};
Type: Function
Called with the full pasted string whenever the user pastes text. The string is delivered verbatim β newlines, escape sequences, and other special characters are preserved exactly as pasted.
Type: string
The pasted text.
Type: object
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Enable or disable the paste handler. Useful when multiple components use usePaste and only one should be active at a time.
A React hook that returns app lifecycle methods.
Type: Function
Exit (unmount) the whole Ink app.
Type: Error | unknown
Optional value that controls how waitUntilExit settles:
exit() resolves with undefined.exit(error) rejects when error is an Error.exit(value) resolves with value.import {useEffect} from 'react';
import {useApp} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {exit} = useApp();
// Exit the app after 5 seconds
useEffect(() => {
setTimeout(() => {
exit();
}, 5000);
}, [exit]);
return β¦
};
Type: Function
Returns a promise that settles after pending render output is flushed to stdout.
import {useEffect} from 'react';
import {useApp} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {waitUntilRenderFlush} = useApp();
useEffect(() => {
void (async () => {
await waitUntilRenderFlush();
runNextCommand();
})();
}, [waitUntilRenderFlush]);
return β¦;
};
A React hook that returns the stdin stream and stdin-related utilities.
Type: stream.Readable\
Default: process.stdin
The stdin stream passed to render() in options.stdin, or process.stdin by default.
Useful if your app needs to handle user input.
import {useStdin} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {stdin} = useStdin();
return β¦
};
Type: boolean
A boolean flag determining if the current stdin supports setRawMode.
A component using setRawMode might want to use isRawModeSupported to nicely fall back in environments where raw mode is not supported.
import {useStdin} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {isRawModeSupported} = useStdin();
return isRawModeSupported ? (
<MyInputComponent />
) : (
<MyComponentThatDoesntUseInput />
);
};
Type: function
Type: boolean
See setRawMode.
Ink exposes this function to be able to handle Ctrl+C, that's why you should use Ink's setRawMode instead of process.stdin.setRawMode.
Warning: This function will throw unless the current stdin supports setRawMode. Use isRawModeSupported to detect setRawMode support.
import {useStdin} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {setRawMode} = useStdin();
useEffect(() => {
setRawMode(true);
return () => {
setRawMode(false);
};
});
return β¦
};
A React hook that returns the stdout stream where Ink renders your app and stdout-related utilities.
Type: stream.Writable\
Default: process.stdout
import {useStdout} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {stdout} = useStdout();
return β¦
};
Write any string to stdout while preserving Ink's output.
It's useful when you want to display external information outside of Ink's rendering and ensure there's no conflict between the two.
It's similar to <Static>, except it can't accept components; it only works with strings.
Type: string
Data to write to stdout.
import {useStdout} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {write} = useStdout();
useEffect(() => {
// Write a single message to stdout, above Ink's output
write('Hello from Ink to stdout\n');
}, []);
return β¦
};
See additional usage example in examples/use-stdout.
A React hook that returns the current layout metrics for a tracked box element. It updates when layout changes (for example terminal resize, sibling/content changes, or position changes).
Use hasMeasured to detect when the currently tracked element has been measured.
Type: React.RefObject<DOMElement>
A ref to the <Box> element to track.
import {useRef} from 'react';
import {Box, Text, useBoxMetrics} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const ref = useRef(null);
const {width, height, left, top, hasMeasured} = useBoxMetrics(ref);
return (
<Box ref={ref}>
<Text>
{hasMeasured ? `${width}x${height} at ${left},${top}` : 'Measuring...'}
</Text>
</Box>
);
};
Type: number
Element width.
Type: number
Element height.
Type: number
Distance from the left edge of the parent.
Type: number
Distance from the top edge of the parent.
Type: boolean
Whether the currently tracked element has been measured.
[!NOTE]
The hook returns{width: 0, height: 0, left: 0, top: 0}until the first layout pass completes. It also returns zeros when the tracked ref is detached.
A React hook that returns the stderr stream and stderr-related utilities.
Type: stream.Writable\
Default: process.stderr
Stderr stream.
import {useStderr} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {stderr} = useStderr();
return β¦
};
Write any string to stderr while preserving Ink's output.
It's useful when you want to display external information outside of Ink's rendering and ensure there's no conflict between the two.
It's similar to <Static>, except it can't accept components; it only works with strings.
Type: string
Data to write to stderr.
import {useStderr} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {write} = useStderr();
useEffect(() => {
// Write a single message to stderr, above Ink's output
write('Hello from Ink to stderr\n');
}, []);
return β¦
};
A React hook that returns the current terminal dimensions and re-renders the component whenever the terminal is resized.
import {Text, useWindowSize} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {columns, rows} = useWindowSize();
return <Text>{columns}x{rows}</Text>;
};
Type: number
Number of columns (horizontal character cells).
Type: number
Number of rows (vertical character cells).
A React hook that returns focus state and focus controls for the current component.
A component that uses the useFocus hook becomes "focusable" to Ink, so when the user presses Tab, Ink will switch focus to this component.
If there are multiple components that execute the useFocus hook, focus will be given to them in the order in which these components are rendered.
This hook returns an object with an isFocused boolean property, which determines whether this component is focused.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Auto-focus this component if there's no active (focused) component right now.
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Enable or disable this component's focus, while still maintaining its position in the list of focusable components. This is useful for inputs that are temporarily disabled.
Type: string\
Required: false
Set a component's focus ID, which can be used to programmatically focus the component. This is useful for large interfaces with many focusable elements to avoid having to cycle through all of them.
import {render, useFocus, Text} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {isFocused} = useFocus();
return <Text>{isFocused ? 'I am focused' : 'I am not focused'}</Text>;
};
render(<Example />);
See example in examples/use-focus and examples/use-focus-with-id.
A React hook that returns methods to manage focus across focusable components.
Enable focus management for all components.
[!NOTE]
You don't need to call this method manually unless you've disabled focus management. Focus management is enabled by default.
import {useFocusManager} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {enableFocus} = useFocusManager();
useEffect(() => {
enableFocus();
}, []);
return β¦
};
Disable focus management for all components. The currently active component (if there's one) will lose its focus.
import {useFocusManager} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {disableFocus} = useFocusManager();
useEffect(() => {
disableFocus();
}, []);
return β¦
};
Switch focus to the next focusable component. If there's no active component right now, focus will be given to the first focusable component. If the active component is the last in the list of focusable components, focus will be switched to the first focusable component.
[!NOTE]
Ink calls this method when user presses Tab.
import {useFocusManager} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {focusNext} = useFocusManager();
useEffect(() => {
focusNext();
}, []);
return β¦
};
Switch focus to the previous focusable component. If there's no active component right now, focus will be given to the first focusable component. If the active component is the first in the list of focusable components, focus will be switched to the last focusable component.
[!NOTE]
Ink calls this method when user presses Shift+Tab.
import {useFocusManager} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {focusPrevious} = useFocusManager();
useEffect(() => {
focusPrevious();
}, []);
return β¦
};
Type: string
Switch focus to the component with the given id.
If there's no component with that ID, focus is not changed.
import {useFocusManager, useInput} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {focus} = useFocusManager();
useInput(input => {
if (input === 's') {
// Focus the component with focus ID 'someId'
focus('someId');
}
});
return β¦
};
Type: string | undefined
The ID of the currently focused component, or undefined if no component is focused.
import {Text, useFocusManager} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const {activeId} = useFocusManager();
return <Text>Focused: {activeId ?? 'none'}</Text>;
};
A React hook that returns methods to control the terminal cursor position after each render. This is essential for IME (Input Method Editor) support, where the composing character is displayed at the cursor location.
import {useState} from 'react';
import {Box, Text, useCursor} from 'ink';
import stringWidth from 'string-width';
const TextInput = () => {
const [text, setText] = useState('');
const {setCursorPosition} = useCursor();
const prompt = '> ';
setCursorPosition({x: stringWidth(prompt + text), y: 1});
return (
<Box flexDirection="column">
<Text>Type here:</Text>
<Text>{prompt}{text}</Text>
</Box>
);
};
Set the cursor position relative to the Ink output. Pass undefined to hide the cursor.
Type: object | undefined
Use string-width to calculate x for strings containing wide characters (CJK, emoji).
See a full example at examples/cursor-ime.
Type: number
Column position (0-based).
Type: number
Row position from the top of the Ink output (0 = first line).
A React hook that returns whether a screen reader is enabled. This is useful when you want to render different output for screen readers.
import {useIsScreenReaderEnabled, Text} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const isScreenReaderEnabled = useIsScreenReaderEnabled();
return (
<Text>
{isScreenReaderEnabled
? 'Screen reader is enabled'
: 'Screen reader is disabled'}
</Text>
);
};
Returns: Instance
Mount a component and render the output.
Type: ReactNode
Type: object
Type: stream.Writable\
Default: process.stdout
Output stream where the app will be rendered.
Type: stream.Readable\
Default: process.stdin
Input stream where app will listen for input.
Type: stream.Writable\
Default: process.stderr
Error stream.
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Configure whether Ink should listen for Ctrl+C keyboard input and exit the app.
This is needed in case process.stdin is in raw mode, because then Ctrl+C is ignored by default and the process is expected to handle it manually.
Type: boolean\
Default: true
Patch console methods to ensure console output doesn't mix with Ink's output.
When any of the console.* methods are called (like console.log()), Ink intercepts their output, clears the main output, renders output from the console method, and then rerenders the main output again.
That way, both are visible and don't overlap each other.
This functionality is powered by patch-console, so if you need to disable Ink's interception of output but want to build something custom, you can use that.
Type: ({renderTime: number}) => void\
Default: undefined
Runs the given callback after each render and re-render with render metrics.
This callback runs after Ink commits a frame, but it does not wait for stdout/stderr stream callbacks.
To run code after output is flushed, use waitUntilRenderFlush().
Type: boolean\
Default: process.env['INK_SCREEN_READER'] === 'true'
Enable screen reader support. See Screen Reader Support.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
If true, each update will be rendered as separate output, without replacing the previous one.
Type: number\
Default: 30
Maximum frames per second for render updates. This controls how frequently the UI can update to prevent excessive re-rendering. Higher values allow more frequent updates but may impact performance. Setting it to a lower value may be useful for components that update very frequently, to reduce CPU usage.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Enable incremental rendering mode which only updates changed lines instead of redrawing the entire output. This can reduce flickering and improve performance for frequently updating UIs.
Type: boolean\
Default: false
Enable React Concurrent Rendering mode.
When enabled:
useTransition and useDeferredValue hooks are fully functionalrender(<MyApp />, {concurrent: true});
[!NOTE]
Concurrent mode changes the timing of renders. Some tests may need to useact()to properly await updates. Theconcurrentoption only takes effect on the first render for a given stdout. If you need to change the rendering mode, callunmount()first.
Type: boolean\
Default: true (false if in CI (detected via is-in-ci) or stdout.isTTY is falsy)
Override automatic interactive mode detection.
By default, Ink detects whether the environment is interactive based on CI detection and stdout.isTTY. When non-interactive, Ink skips terminal-specific features like ANSI erase sequences, cursor manipulation, synchronized output, resize handling, and kitty keyboard auto-detection. Only the final frame of non-static output is written at unmount.
Most users should not need to set this option. Use it when you have your own "interactive" detection logic that differs from the built-in behavior.
// Use your own detection logic
const isInteractive = myCustomDetection();
render(<MyApp />, {interactive: isInteractive});
Type: object\
Default: undefined
Enable the kitty keyboard protocol for enhanced keyboard input handling. When enabled, terminals that support the protocol will report additional key information including super, hyper, capsLock, numLock modifiers and eventType (press/repeat/release).
import {render} from 'ink';
render(<MyApp />, {kittyKeyboard: {mode: 'auto'}});
import {render} from 'ink';
render(<MyApp />, {
kittyKeyboard: {
mode: 'enabled',
flags: ['disambiguateEscapeCodes', 'reportEventTypes'],
},
});
kittyKeyboard.mode
Type: 'auto' | 'enabled' | 'disabled'\
Default: 'auto'
'auto': Detect terminal support using a heuristic precheck (known terminals like kitty, WezTerm, Ghostty) followed by a protocol query confirmation (CSI ? u). The protocol is only enabled if the terminal responds to the query within a short timeout.'enabled': Force enable the protocol. Both stdin and stdout must be TTYs.'disabled': Never enable the protocol.Type: string[]\
Default: ['disambiguateEscapeCodes']
Protocol flags to request from the terminal. Pass an array of flag name strings.
Available flags:
'disambiguateEscapeCodes' - Disambiguate escape codes'reportEventTypes' - Report key press, repeat, and release events'reportAlternateKeys' - Report alternate key encodings'reportAllKeysAsEscapeCodes' - Report all keys as escape codes'reportAssociatedText' - Report associated text with key eventsWhen the kitty keyboard protocol is enabled, input handling changes in several ways:
input parameter of useInput. They can still be detected via the key object properties.Ctrl+letter as codepoint 1-26 (the kitty CSI-u alternate form), input is set to the letter name (e.g. 'c' for Ctrl+C) and key.ctrl is true. This ensures exitOnCtrlC and custom Ctrl+letter handlers continue to work regardless of which codepoint form the terminal uses.Ctrl+I vs Tab - without the protocol, both produce the same byte (\x09). With the protocol, they are reported as distinct keys.Shift+Enter vs Enter - the shift modifier is correctly reported.Escape key vs Ctrl+[ - these are disambiguated.reportEventTypes flag, key press, repeat, and release events are distinguished via key.eventType.Returns: string
Render a React element to a string synchronously. Unlike render(), this function does not write to stdout, does not set up any terminal event listeners, and returns the rendered output as a string.
Useful for generating documentation, writing output to files, testing, or any scenario where you need the rendered output as a string without starting a persistent terminal application.
import {renderToString, Text, Box} from 'ink';
const output = renderToString(
<Box padding={1}>
<Text color="green">Hello World</Text>
</Box>,
);
console.log(output);
Notes:
useInput, useStdin, useStdout, useStderr, useWindowSize, useApp, useFocus, useFocusManager) return default no-op values since there is no terminal session. They will not throw, but they will not function as in a live terminal.useEffect callbacks will execute during rendering (due to synchronous rendering mode), but state updates they trigger will not affect the returned output, which reflects the initial render.useLayoutEffect callbacks fire synchronously during commit, so state updates they trigger will be reflected in the output.<Static> component is supported β its output is prepended to the dynamic output.Type: ReactNode
Type: object
Type: number\
Default: 80
Width of the virtual terminal in columns. Controls where text wrapping occurs.
const output = renderToString(<Text>{'A'.repeat(100)}</Text>, {
columns: 40,
});
// Text wraps at 40 columns
This is the object that render() returns.
Replace the previous root node with a new one or update the props of the current root node.
Type: ReactNode
// Update props of the root node
const {rerender} = render(<Counter count={1} />);
rerender(<Counter count={2} />);
// Replace root node
const {rerender} = render(<OldCounter />);
rerender(<NewCounter />);
Manually unmount the whole Ink app.
const {unmount} = render(<MyApp />);
unmount();
Returns a promise that settles when the app is unmounted.
It resolves with the value passed to exit(value) and rejects with the error passed to exit(error).
When unmount() is called manually, it settles after unmount-related stdout writes complete.
const {unmount, waitUntilExit} = render(<MyApp />);
setTimeout(unmount, 1000);
await waitUntilExit(); // resolves after `unmount()` is called
Returns a promise that settles after pending render output is flushed to stdout.
Useful when you need to run code only after a frame is written:
const {rerender, waitUntilRenderFlush} = render(<MyApp step="loading" />);
rerender(<MyApp step="ready" />);
await waitUntilRenderFlush(); // output for "ready" is flushed
runNextCommand();
Delete the internal Ink instance associated with the current stdout.
This is mostly useful for advanced cases (for example, tests) where you need render() to create a fresh instance for the same stream.
This does not unmount the current app.
Clear output.
const {clear} = render(<MyApp />);
clear();
Measure the dimensions of a particular <Box> element.
Returns an object with width and height properties.
This function is useful when your component needs to know the amount of available space it has. You can use it when you need to change the layout based on the length of its content.
[!NOTE]measureElement()returns{width: 0, height: 0}when called during render (before layout is calculated). Call it from post-render code, such asuseEffect,useLayoutEffect, input handlers, or timer callbacks. When content changes, pass the relevant dependency to your effect so it re-measures after each update.
Type: MutableRef
A reference to a <Box> element captured with the ref property.
See Refs for more information on how to capture references.
import {render, measureElement, Box, Text} from 'ink';
const Example = () => {
const ref = useRef();
useEffect(() => {
const {width, height} = measureElement(ref.current);
// width = 100, height = 1
}, []);
return (
<Box width={100}>
<Box ref={ref}>
<Text>This box will stretch to 100 width</Text>
</Box>
</Box>
);
};
render(<Example />);
Ink components are simple to test with ink-testing-library. Here's a simple example that checks how the component is rendered:
import React from 'react';
import {Text} from 'ink';
import {render} from 'ink-testing-library';
const Test = () => <Text>Hello World</Text>;
const {lastFrame} = render(<Test />);
lastFrame() === 'Hello World'; //=> true
Check out ink-testing-library for more examples and full documentation.
Ink supports React Devtools out of the box. To enable integration with React Devtools in your Ink-based CLI, first ensure you have installed the optional react-devtools-core dependency, and then run your app with the DEV=true environment variable:
DEV=true my-cli
Then, start React Devtools itself:
npx react-devtools
After it starts, you should see the component tree of your CLI. You can even inspect and change the props of components, and see the results immediately in the CLI, without restarting it.
[!NOTE]
You must manually quit your CLI via Ctrl+C after you're done testing.
Ink has basic support for screen readers.
To enable it, you can either pass the isScreenReaderEnabled option to the render function or set the INK_SCREEN_READER environment variable to true.
Ink implements a small subset of functionality from the ARIA specification.
render(<MyApp />, {isScreenReaderEnabled: true});
When screen reader support is enabled, Ink will try its best to generate a screen-reader-friendly output.
For example, for this code:
<Box aria-role="checkbox" aria-state={{checked: true}}>
<Text>Accept terms and conditions</Text>
</Box>
Ink will generate the following output for screen readers:
(checked) checkbox: Accept terms and conditions
You can also provide a custom label for screen readers if you want to render something different for them.
For example, if you are building a progress bar, you can use aria-label to provide a more descriptive label for screen readers.
<Box>
<Box width="50%" height={1} backgroundColor="green" />
<Text aria-label="Progress: 50%">50%</Text>
</Box>
In the example above, the screen reader will read "Progress: 50%" instead of "50%".
aria-labelType: string
A label for the element for screen readers.
aria-hiddenType: boolean\
Default: false
Hide the element from screen readers.
Type: string
The role of the element.
Supported values:
buttoncheckboxradioradiogrouplistlistitemmenumenuitemprogressbartabtablisttimertoolbartableType: object
The state of the element.
Supported values:
checked (boolean)disabled (boolean)expanded (boolean)selected (boolean)When building custom components, it's important to keep accessibility in mind. While Ink provides the building blocks, ensuring your components are accessible will make your CLIs usable by a wider audience.
useIsScreenReaderEnabled hook to detect if a screen reader is active. You can then render more descriptive output for screen reader users.aria-role, aria-state, and aria-label props on <Box> and <Text> to provide semantic meaning to screen readers.MemoryRouter.The examples directory contains a set of real examples. You can run them with:
npm run example examples/[example name]
# e.g. npm run example examples/borders
<Box> component.useFocus hook to manage focus between components.<Static> component to render permanent output.MemoryRouter.When running on CI (detected via the CI environment variable), Ink adapts its rendering:
CI=false:
CI=false node my-cli.js