1. Getting user's choices from a menu
- Posted by Caracatsanis Pty Ltd <sunpsych at VIC.OZLAND.NET.AU> Aug 13, 2000
- 439 views
I'd appreciate some ideas about user-friendly and fool-proof ways of doing this: 1 present the user with a menu of choices (not mutually exclusive): eg MENU OF USER CHOICES A this B that C other 2 get user's choice(s): eg ENTER THE LETTER (A,B,C) OF YOUR CHOICE(S): 3 suppose the choices are A and C. Is it preferable to read them as a "unit", or as separate items? Should I insist on spaces between choices? If so, what happens if the user enters AC instead of A C? What if the menu choices were numerals (1,2,3) instead of letters? Would the code differ? Would there be any different issues to take into account? Thank you Alex Caracatsanis
2. Re: Getting user's choices from a menu
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> Aug 12, 2000
- 446 views
- Last edited Aug 13, 2000
On Sat, 12 Aug 2000, you wrote: > I'd appreciate some ideas about user-friendly and fool-proof ways of doing > this: > 1 present the user with a menu of choices (not mutually exclusive): > eg MENU OF USER CHOICES > A this > B that > C other > > 2 get user's choice(s): > eg ENTER THE LETTER (A,B,C) OF YOUR CHOICE(S): > > 3 suppose the choices are A and C. Is it preferable to read them as a > "unit", or as separate items? Should I insist on spaces between choices? If > so, what happens if the user enters AC instead of A C? What if the menu > choices were numerals (1,2,3) instead of letters? Would the code differ? > Would there be any different issues to take into account? The user-friendly way to do this would be with a series of checkboxes. There's a small (5k) file in the Euphoria archives which provides this and other simple controls for DOS or Linux - search for "simple text mode interface". Regards, Irv
3. Re: Getting user's choices from a menu
- Posted by Beaumont Furniss <bfurniss at IHUG.CO.NZ> Aug 13, 2000
- 460 views
If you could construct something like this , that's easy to setup and use , you'd have a number of persons interested . This is probably something that many attempt at sometime , I know I have , with varying degrees of success. The conceptual difficulty is in making a generally usable , easily constructed menu. On 2000-08-13 EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU said: EU>I'd appreciate some ideas about user-friendly and fool-proof ways EU>of doing this: EU>1 present the user with a menu of choices (not mutually EU>exclusive): eg MENU OF USER CHOICES EU>A this EU>B that EU>C other EU>2 get user's choice(s): EU>eg ENTER THE LETTER (A,B,C) OF YOUR CHOICE(S): EU>3 suppose the choices are A and C. Is it preferable to read them EU>as a "unit", or as separate items? Should I insist on spaces EU>between choices? If so, what happens if the user enters AC instead EU>of A C? What if the menu choices were numerals (1,2,3) instead of EU>letters? Would the code differ? Would there be any different issues EU>to take into account? EU>Thank you EU>Alex Caracatsanis Net-Tamer V 1.11 - Test Drive
4. Re: Getting user's choices from a menu
- Posted by Kat <gertie at PELL.NET> Aug 13, 2000
- 436 views
On 13 Aug 2000, at 3:41, Beaumont Furniss wrote: > If you could construct something like this , that's easy to setup and > use , you'd have a number of persons interested . > This is probably something that many attempt at sometime , I know I > have , with varying degrees of success. > The conceptual difficulty is in making a generally usable , easily > constructed menu. I understand the concept. > > On 2000-08-13 EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU said: > EU>I'd appreciate some ideas about user-friendly and fool-proof ways > EU>of doing this: > EU>1 present the user with a menu of choices (not mutually > EU>exclusive): eg MENU OF USER CHOICES > EU>A this > EU>B that > EU>C other > EU>2 get user's choice(s): > EU>eg ENTER THE LETTER (A,B,C) OF YOUR CHOICE(S): > EU>3 suppose the choices are A and C. Is it preferable to read them > EU>as a "unit", or as separate items? Should I insist on spaces > EU>between choices? If so, what happens if the user enters AC instead > EU>of A C? What if the menu choices were numerals (1,2,3) instead of > EU>letters? Would the code differ? Would there be any different issues > EU>to take into account? Easy, since you know what you are looking for, throw away everything else. Then make the remaining items into the form you'd like, regardless of what they are, then pass that to your input. user: a,B,c program: upcase alphabet, delete all non-alphanumeric(,";;'<>,./?, spaces, etc) user: 1 2 3 program: upcase alphabet, delete all non-alphanumeric(,";;'<>,./?, spaces, etc) user: a 5, X program: upcase alphabet, delete all non-alphanumeric(,";;'<>,./?, spaces, etc) UNTESTED ( translated to Eu from mirc ) for loop = 1 to length(input) do inputseg = mid(input,loop,1) intermediatetemp = findtok(" A B C 1 2 3 ", inputseg ,1,32) if ( intermediatetemp != 0 ) then -- assuming a=1 b=2 and c=3, if not, then use other id#'s or something in the following line,, i'm just parsing the possible random input from user. NeedToDo = gettok(" routineid1 routineid2 routineid3 routineid1 routineid2 routineid3 " , intermediatetemp ,32) -- here, do something with NeedToDo, save it, exec it, display it, or something. -- Robert, this would be a great place for a "gosub(sequence SomeValidRoutineName)" or an "exec(sequence SomeVariableTheProgramMade)", something that makes the routineid() setup/calls transparently to the programmer. end if end for Kat, loving those string routines in strtok.e