http://invisible-island.net/
Copyright © 1999-2021,2022 by Thomas E. Dickey
Though similar in style to CDK, it is different, being a script-interpreter which provides a set of curses widgets. Widgets are objects whose appearance and behavior can be customized. There is a much-reduced variation of dialog, called lxdialog, which is used in Linux kernel configuration.
Dialog was written by Savio Lam <[email protected]> and modified by several people:
Date | Version | Developer | Features |
---|---|---|---|
1993/12/17 | 0.1 | Savio Lam | The options in the initial release of
dialog were --inputbox ,
--msgbox , and --yesno . |
1994/01/03 | 0.2 | Savio Lam | Several options were added: --checklist ,
--clear , --infobox ,
--menu , --textbox , and
--title . |
1994/01/13 | 0.3 | Savio Lam | This added simple color support, along with the
--create-rc option to configure it at
runtime. |
1994/06/11 | 0.4 | Stuart Herbert | This improved the color support, providing the
3-dimensional appearance by using shadows. It also added the
--backtitle and --radiolist
options. |
1994/10/08 | 0.4 fork | FreeBSD developers |
Andrey A Chernov imported dialog 0.4 into the FreeBSD
source tree, splitting it into program- and
library-sections.
The main use of this version of dialog was reportedly sysinstall. That was replaced by this version of dialog for FreeBSD 9.0 by Nathan Whitehorn and others. I made improvements to dialog to help with this starting early in 2011, adding these options:
|
1994/11/07 | 0.5 | Marc Ewing | This added the --gauge and
--separate-output options. It modified the
--inputbox option to provide for an (optional) initial value.
The dialog.pl file was added as an example. |
1995/01/28 | 0.6 | Marc Ewing | Only bug-fixes were made. |
1995/09/12 | 0.6c | Florian La Roche | Added mouse support by Rubini, dated 1994. This also adapted changes from 0.5 or 0.6, adding the gauge widget (but misspelled). The misspelling propagated into cdialog. |
1995/08/17 | 0.6z | John Gatewood Ham | This added no new features. It modified the usage message to show only those features that were compiled-in. |
1996/01/15 | 0.9a | Pasquale De Marco "Pako" | This is cdialog, based on 0.6c. It added
many new options:--and-widget , --aspect ,
--beep , --beep-after ,
--begin , --cr-wrap ,
--no-kill , --print-maxsize ,
--print-size , --print-version ,
--size-err , --sleep ,
--tab-correct , --tab-len ,
--tailbox , and --tailboxbg . |
1996/01/16 | 0.69 | Allesandro Rubini | This is a fork of 0.6z, not used by later development. |
1997/01/09 | 0.6z | John Gatewood Ham | In my copy, the samples and docs were updated about a year later. |
2001/02/06 | 0.61a | Thomas Regner |
This added a file-selector dialog option
--file .The README states that it was distributed as a patch to 0.6z, however my copy was fully-patched (probably a copy of the tar-ball from which the patch was made). Vincent Stemen incorporated this work in the patches
which he sent to me. That became the Later, in
2004 I later added a different option named
|
2001/03/16 | 0.7 | Vincent Stemen | This is based on 0.61a, intentionally between 0.6z and
0.9a-20010115. Vincent sent patches to me in 2001 to add his changes to my ongoing snapshots, so that this fork's changes were not lost. |
I became involved with dialog for the same reason as Cdk: they were the most well-known applications using ncurses, and I realized that they were not being maintained well enough to reflect ncurses' capabilities.
Initially, I made fixes and reviewed the code to ensure that problems reported were not related to ncurses. After that, I resumed development, adding new widget types. See the changelog for details.
At the end of 2005, I relicensed dialog as LGPL. It was GPL before, which made it (the dialog library in particular) unusable by developers of non-GPL programs. After several requests, I discussed this with Santiago Vila (the Debian package maintainer), indicating my intention to audit the code, and remove as needed any fragments predating my work.
I reviewed the code (studying the changes using diffstat and tkdiff) and found that over the course of development and improvements, I had replaced all of the original program. After accounting for the license notice itself, blank lines and curly braces, there was no trace of the 0.9a+Debian version.
Because I had replaced the original program with my own work, that made me an "original author" of dialog, and allowed me to relicense it.
dialog has (at the end of 2012) 99 options shown in its usage message. Of those, 29 set a box (widget) type.
Name | Version |
---|---|
--buildlist
|
1.2 2012/12/30 |
--calendar
|
0.9b 2001/04/15 |
--checklist
|
0.2 |
--dselect
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--editbox
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--form
|
1.0 2003/08/18 |
--fselect
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--gauge
|
0.5 |
--infobox
|
0.2 |
--inputbox
|
0.1 |
--inputmenu
|
1.0 2003/01/30 |
--menu
|
0.2 |
--mixedform
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--mixedgauge
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--msgbox
|
0.1 |
--passwordbox
|
0.9a 1999/12/25 |
--passwordform
|
1.0 2005/12/07 |
--pause
|
1.0 2004/12/19 |
--prgbox
|
1.1 2011/03/02 |
--programbox
|
1.1 2011/03/02 |
--progressbox
|
1.1 2006/01/19 |
--radiolist
|
0.4 |
--rangebox
|
1.2 2012/12/30 |
--tailbox
|
0.9a |
--tailboxbg
|
0.9a |
--textbox
|
0.2 |
--timebox
|
0.9b 2001/04/15 |
--treeview
|
1.2 2012/12/30 |
--yesno
|
0.1 |
The other visible options set common variables used by the widgets:
Name | Version |
---|---|
--ascii-lines
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--and-widget
|
0.9a |
--aspect
|
0.9a |
--backtitle
|
0.4 |
--beep-after
|
0.9a |
--beep
|
0.9a |
--begin
|
0.9a |
--cancel-label
|
0.9a 2001/12/02 |
--clear
|
0.2 |
--colors
|
0.9b 2002/08/14 |
--column-separator
|
1.1 2008/07/27 |
--cr-wrap
|
0.9a |
--create-rc
|
0.4 |
--date-format
|
1.1 2010/01/19 |
--default-button
|
1.1 2012/07/03 |
--default-item
|
0.9a 2000/02/22 |
--defaultno
|
0.9a 1999/12/25 |
--exit-label
|
0.9b 2002/05/19 |
--extra-button
|
0.9b 2002/06/22 |
--extra-label
|
0.9b 2002/06/22 |
--help-button
|
0.9b 2002/03/09 |
--help-label
|
0.9b 2002/03/09 |
--help-status
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
--hfile
|
1.1 2011/06/30 |
--hline
|
1.1 2011/06/30 |
--ignore
|
0.9b 2001/10/14 |
--input-fd
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
--insecure
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
--item-help
|
0.9b 2000/10/08 |
--keep-tite
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--keep-window
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
--max-input
|
0.9a 2002/03/09 |
--no-cancel
|
0.9b 2000/12/12 |
--no-collapse
|
0.9b 2002/05/19 |
--no-items
|
1.2 20121230 |
--no-kill
|
0.9a |
--no-label
|
0.9a 2001/12/02 |
--no-lines
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--no-mouse
|
1.1 2011/01/18 |
--no-nl-expand
|
1.1 2011/06/30 |
--no-ok
|
1.1 2007/09/30 |
--no-shadow
|
0.9a |
--no-tags
|
1.2 20121230 |
--no-items
|
1.2 20121230 |
--nook
|
1.1 2007/09/30 |
--notags
|
1.2 20121230 |
--ok-label
|
0.9a 2001/12/02 |
--output-fd
|
0.9b 2002/08/14 |
--output-separator
|
1.1 2008/07/27 |
--print-maxsize
|
0.9a |
--print-size
|
0.9a |
--print-version
|
0.9a |
--quoted
|
1.1 2008/07/27 |
--scrollbar
|
1.1 2010/01/19 |
--separate-output
|
0.5 |
--separate-widget
|
0.9a |
--shadow
|
0.9a |
--single-quoted
|
0.9b 2004/06/06 |
--size-err
|
0.9a |
--sleep
|
0.9a |
--stderr
|
0.9a 2000/07/02 |
--stdout
|
0.9a 2000/07/02 |
--tab-correct
|
0.9a |
--tab-len
|
0.9a |
--time-format
|
1.1 2010/01/19 |
--timeout
|
0.9a 2002/03/09 |
--title
|
0.2 |
--trace
|
1.1 2007/02/27 |
--trim
|
0.9a 2001/10/14 |
--version
|
0.9a 2000/07/30 |
--visit-items
|
0.9b 2004/06/06 |
--yes-label
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
dialog maps some options into its own set. Some are dialog options which have been imitated in other programs; some are the reverse.
Name | Version | Mapped to | Version |
---|---|---|---|
--cancel-button
|
1.2 20121230 | --cancel-label
|
0.9b 2001/12/02 |
--guage
|
0.6c | --gauge
|
0.9a 2000/01/15 |
--no-button
|
1.2 20121230 | --no-label
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
--nocancel
|
0.9a 2000/02/22 | --no-cancel
|
0.9a 2000/12/12 |
--noitem
|
1.2 20121230 | --no-items
|
1.2 2012/12/30 |
--notags
|
1.2 20121230 | --no-tags
|
1.2 2012/12/30 |
--ok-button
|
1.2 20121230 | --ok-label
|
0.9b 2001/12/02 |
--scrolltext
|
1.2 20121230 | --scrollbar
|
1.1 2010/01/19 |
--separator
|
0.9b 2003/08/18 | --output-separator
|
1.1 2008/07/27 |
--yes-button
|
1.2 20121230 | --yes-label
|
0.9b 2003/11/26 |
Some of the hidden options are simply ignored:
Name | Version |
---|---|
--allow-close
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--auto-placement
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--fb
|
0.9a 2000/02/22 |
--fixed-font
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--fullbutton
|
0.9a 2000/02/22 |
--icon
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--keep-colors
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--no-close
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--no-cr-wrap
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--screen-center
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--smooth
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--topleft
|
1.2 2012/12/30 |
--under-mouse
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
--wmclass
|
0.9a 2001/05/27 |
dialog can be built in a variety of configurations, reducing its size.
Configure options | Size | Size with libraries |
---|---|---|
--disable-extras
|
90801 | 2298513 |
--disable-extras --enable-whiptail
|
91217 | 2298929 |
--disable-extras --enable-whiptail --enable-nls --enable-widec --with-ncursesw
|
96257 | 2465100 |
default (all widgets) | 171075 | 2378787 |
--enable-nls --enable-widec --with-ncursesw
|
175883 | 2544726 |
As I note in the manpage, the total program size should count the required libraries. This is particularly true in restricted environments such as an install disk.
Here are installed sizes from Debian 5.0 (32-bit) and 6.0 (64-bit). I included both releases to provide a comparison with Xdialog. It is apparent that the installed size counting required libraries is always lowest for dialog, even when it has more than twice the functionality of the next smallest (whiptail).
Program | Size | Size with libraries |
---|---|---|
dialog 1.1-20080316-1 | 140552 | 1917378 |
dialog 1.1-20100428-1 | 164408 | 2407723 |
whiptail 0.52.2-11.3-lenny1 | 20816 | 2287319 |
whiptail 0.52.11-1 | 25032 | 3048481 |
xdialog 2.31-2 | 86976 | 4465172 |
zenity 2.22.1-2 | 59536 | 13164249 |
zenity 2.30.0-1 | 74400 | 14216563 |
kdialog (kdebase-bin) 4:3.5.9.dfsg.1-6+lenny1 | 77220 | 22675849 |
kdialog (kdebase-bin) 4:4.4.5-2 | 89944 | 37593148 |
Debian (and derived distributions such as Ubuntu) are a special case for compatibility concerns because their installer uses terminal-based scripts extensively and there is some attempt to use either dialog or whiptail.
Interestingly, the popularity contest (in which I do not participate) seems to show dialog due to installation bias of Debian has half the popularity of whiptail. The two are not installed on an equal basis because dialog is "optional" while whiptail is "important". Here is an extract of the relevant information as I am documenting dialog 1.2:
#Format # #<name> is the package name; #<inst> is the number of people who installed this package; #<vote> is the number of people who use this package regularly; #<old> is the number of people who installed, but don't use this package # regularly; #<recent> is the number of people who upgraded this package recently; #<no-files> is the number of people whose entry didn't contain enough # information (atime and ctime were 0). #rank name inst vote old recent no-files (maintainer) 1791 kdebase-bin 11587 1878 6407 268 3034 (Debian Qt/kde Maintainers) 12634 whiptail 129722 52877 68792 8017 36 (Alastair Mckinstry) 16056 zenity 58831 15952 36121 6737 21 (Debian Gnome Maintainers) 24528 dialog 20677 3198 16421 1052 6 (Santiago Vila) 129051 xdialog 305 40 265 0 0 (Not in sid)
There is no separate package for kdialog (it is part of the kdebase-bin package). There are usable figures for the other programs.
The count for zenity can be explained in part because that program is not really compatible with either dialog or whiptail. Thus, it is likely that there are scripts which cannot be used by other programs (reviewing the package dependencies makes this apparent: only one depends on either dialog or zenity).
The issue of compatibility comes up occasionally. I do not intend to break old scripts. You may note in the change-log fixes for regressions. When merging Victor Stemens' changes, I spent time ironing out issues in text justification.
A bigger issue is cross-compatibility with similar programs.
Xdialog's author paid attention to compatibility, making a good attempt at working with scripts that dialog would work with. He added many widgets, some of which are viable in a terminal enviroment. I have adapted the most useful of those.
These threads give some insight on why Xdialog is no longer in Debian (because it was a victim of the successive incompatibilities of the GNOME libraries):
As noted in the forums, the alternative is zenity, but that is largely incompatible.
One of the challenging aspects about making scripts compatible with whiptail is its documentation. Whiptail is a part of the newt package, which has the same problem. I have a collection of releases, which helps.
Newt was initially released (0.25) in May
1998. It had a short tutorial on using the package, no detailed
documentation. The source code is the documentation.
Successive releases for the next couple of years added undated items to its
change-log, with version numbers increasing more rapidly than the
package version. For instance, newt 0.50.8's changelog mentions
0.55 as the most recent version. There was no fixed maintainer
for the package by Red Hat. However, comments in the
newt.spec
give some clues as to who was modifying
it. It was imported into git in 2006, from
which detailed history can be gleaned. For instance:
ndialog
The situation in the Debian package is not much better. There has been a fixed set of maintainers, but their source history is ad hoc, unsystematic.
Here are some dates and data for the Red Hat releases. The ".spec" file serves in place of a change-log. However, it lacks most of the information which I would expect to find in a package of this type. In particular, there is no summary of features added or changed for each release.
Date | Version | Developer | SLOC |
---|---|---|---|
1998-05-05 | 0.25 | Erik Troan | 6431 |
1998-08-19 | 0.30 | Bill Nottingham | 6410 |
2000-02-25 | 0.50.8 | Bill Nottingham et al | 8265 |
2000-08-22 | 0.50.17 | Erik Troan | 8567 |
2003-02-05 | 0.51.4 | Matt Wilson | 9418 |
2003-08-19 | 0.51.6 | Michael K Johnson | 9419 |
2003-01-04 | 0.52.0 | Adrian Havill | 9397 |
2003-10-13 | 0.52.4 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10377 |
2007-01-31 | 0.52.5 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10431 |
2007-03-02 | 0.52.6 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10490 |
2007-06-15 | 0.52.7 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10584 |
2008-01-23 | 0.52.8 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10603 |
2009-09-24 | 0.52.11 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10706 |
2011-12-02 | 0.52.14 | Miroslav Lichvar | 10972 |
The point in reviewing whiptail's history is to see when
features were added which affect compatibility with dialog.
Here is a table showing whiptail's command-line options, together
with the corresponding dialog option, dates and related bug
reports which motivate their respective changes. The dates for
whiptail are from its git repository for commits; they are not
release dates (and you may notice that Debian's updates were not
rapidly applied upstream).
Name | Whiptail date |
Dialog date |
Same as | Original date |
Whiptail changes |
Dialog changes |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
--backtitle
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/06/11 | |||||
--cancel-button
|
2007/01/31 | 2012/12/30 | --cancel-label
|
2001/12/02 | Redhat #126768 / Debian #242851 | 1.2 review | |
--checklist
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/01/03 | |||||
--clear
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/01/03 | |||||
* | --default-item
|
2006/08/25 | 2000/02/22 | Redhat #117473 / Debian #49352 | Debian #49796 | ||
--defaultno
|
1997/04/14 | 1999/10/07 | |||||
--fb
|
1997/03/18 | 2000/02/22 | ignored | maintainer hint | |||
--gauge
|
1997/03/18 | 1995/01/28 | |||||
--infobox
|
1998/01/03 | 1994/01/03 | |||||
--inputbox
|
1997/03/18 | 1993/12/17 | |||||
--menu
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/01/03 | |||||
--msgbox
|
1997/03/18 | 1993/12/17 | |||||
--no-button
|
2007/01/31 | 2012/12/30 | --no-label
|
2003/11/26 | Redhat #126768 / Debian #242851 | 1.2 review | |
--nocancel
|
1997/03/18 | 2000/02/22 | maintainer hint | ||||
--noitem
|
1997/03/18 | 2012/12/30 | 1.2 review | ||||
--notags
|
2004/04/07 | 2012/12/30 | Redhat #117468 / Debian #47597 | 1.2 review | |||
--ok-button
|
2007/01/31 | 2012/12/30 | --ok-label
|
2001/12/02 | Redhat #126768 / Debian #242851 | 1.2 review | |
* | --output-fd
|
2004/04/07 | 2002/08/14 | Redhat #117469 | Debian #153984 | ||
* | --passwordbox
|
2006/08/25 | 1999/12/25 | Debian #45961 | Debian #45964 | ||
--radiolist
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/06/11 | |||||
--scrolltext
|
1997/03/18 | 2012/12/30 | --scrollbar
|
2010/01/19 | 1.2 review | ||
--separate-output
|
1997/03/18 | 1995/01/28 | |||||
--textbox
|
2004/04/14 | 1994/01/03 | Redhat #117472 / Debian patch | ||||
--title
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/01/03 | |||||
--topleft
|
2006/10/12 | 2012/12/30 | --begin 0 0
|
patch from Debian? | 1.2 review | ||
--yes-button
|
2007/01/31 | 2012/12/30 | --yes-label
|
2003/11/26 | Redhat #126768 / Debian #242851 | 1.2 review | |
--yesno
|
1997/03/18 | 1994/01/03 |
Early on, there was some discussion of making
dialog compatible with the options recognized by
whiptail. Santiago Vila (the Debian package
maintainer for dialog) mentioned this, and I
made improvements, e.g., in 2000/02/22. Joey Hess made a point
of providing similar changes (such as the
--passwordbox
option) to improve both programs.
At the time, I overlooked --noitem
(perhaps
because there was no documentation), and omitted
--scrolltext
because it was cosmetic only (there was
no mouse support in newt). If there had been a bug report
regarding those or other features of whiptail, I
would have addressed it. However, there was none.
Although whiptail is given a higher priority
(important) in Debian than dialog (optional),
some packagers either expressed a preference for
dialog's additional functionality, or used the
features which work with both. In Debian 6 for instance, I see
these counts from /var/lib/dpkg/available
:
Depends | Recommends | Suggests | |
---|---|---|---|
whiptail | 9 | 4 | 3 |
dialog | 16 | 7 | 5 |
There appear to be two distinct uses of whiptail and newt:
Reflecting that difference, Debian has long maintained a large set of patches for whiptail. Compare the patch sizes listed below with the size of the newt package listed above. The Debian package's change-log states that it started a year before newt's first release, with newt 0.10; however it was first released with Debian 2.0 (after newt's 0.25 release). Here are some numbers (obtained by inspecting packages from archive.debian.org). By the way, the packages for Debian 4.0 and 5.0 were updated after the official release:
Release | Date | Version | Diffstat | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Files | Added | Deleted | |||
Debian 2.0 | 1998-06-18 | 0.21-8 | 28 | 859 | 74 |
Debian 2.1 | 1998-12-11 | 0.25-3 | 25 | 883 | 47 |
Debian 2.2 | 2000-04-23 | 0.50-7 | 20 | 1106 | 39 |
Debian 3.0 | 2002-04-03 | 0.50-17 | 38 | 2117 | 165 |
Debian 3.1 | 2005-04-30 | 0.51.6 | 54 | 9037 | 0 |
Debian 4.0 | 2007-01-22 | 0.52-10 | 51 | 13605 | 0 |
Debian 5.0 | 2009-09-24 | 0.52.11.3 | 54 | 13721 | 0 |
Debian 6.0 | 2010-06-21 | 0.52.11-1 | 34 | 4185 | 0 |
The drop in size for Debian 6.0 is due to a resync with the Red Hat upstream in 2006. It takes a while for a change to propagate through Debian. The Debian 6.0 package has "only" 8 patches, the largest of which is 2160 lines added for bidi support.
While whiptail had a --textbox
option "early on", it was removed before version 0.25, in
1997-08-18. Debian's patches added that back. It was not until
the 0.52.0 sync in 2006-09-19 that upstream
whiptail had this option.
That feature, by the way, never appeared in a bug report.
Another feature which came into Red Hat's git without a bug
report was the --topleft
option (2006-10-12).
In other cases, the Debian package maintainer sent changes to Red Hat as part of a bug report.
--default-item
(see 0.9a 2000/02/22)
--output-fd
(see 0.9b 2002/08/14)
--passwordbox
(see 0.9a 1999/12/25)
--separate-output
(a feature from dialog 0.5 which was adapted by Debian in newt 0.21-4, 12 Feb 1998).
Two of those (--output-fd
and
--passwordbox
) are clearly the work of Joey
Hess. One was adapted from my work.
In each case, the manpage description is (except for changing
"dialog" to "whiptail") identical. The two options
implemented by Joey Hess provided manpage updates. The other
two were copied from dialog.
The early Debian package for newt noted
above adapted a manpage from dialog. It
describes the --gauge
option. That text was
copied from the manpage for dialog 0.6, but (noting that Marc
Ewing's name was not in the manpage, rather it was in the
README file) the Debian maintainers did not provide
attribution for him either. The disclaimer at the end "based
on" is too generous (to the Debian maintainer), since the
work involved consisted of no more than removing the
description of --create-rc
and changing "dialog"
to "whiptail" throughout.
The whiptail manpage does not state this; it cites the Debian package maintainers as the developers and references dialog 0.3 as the starting point of the manpage. I reported the manpage issues as Debian bug #406278 early in 2007. Debian's maintainer has ignored it for five years.
Requests without a patch never made it, or get odd treatment:
Bug
126767 – whiptail: Please add the dialog 'form' box
option
(rejected)
Bug
126768 – please allow way to change the text of the
cancel button
Implemented by the upstream maintainer a couple of years
later, this provides the same functionality as the 2001/2003
changes in dialog—but using different option names.
Some longstanding bugs were fixed upstream without any apparent help from the Debian maintainer:
I did not notice any of this until I started reviewing my 1.2 changes for compatibility with whiptail. After all, there were no relevant bug reports.
My 1.2 changes were prompted by having done a set of fixes
toward a new update, and happening to think about a list I had
made in 2006 of interesting widgets from Xdialog
and FreeBSD's fork to implement in dialog. Since
I had implemented most of the FreeBSD parts, I realized that if I
implemented the comparable parts of the Xdialog
list I would be at my goal for 1.2. So I did that, and in
studying the Xdialog documentation noticed the
--notags
option. That led me back to compare with
whiptail, and finding the extra (and in the case
of Red Hat #126768) redundant options to deal with.
Incidentally, I was reminded while collecting this information of the reason why whiptail is the program used rather than dialog: It dates back to the ncurses licensing dispute in May 1997. In a connected thread on the Debian mailing list, Bruce Perens demonstrated his support for Eric Raymond by stating that
Any new work I do will use slang rather than ncurses.
In context, "new work" referred to the installer group. By the time I started maintaining dialog a year later, the matter had already been decided. That was not the last issue from that group; over the next few years (until sometime in 2000, probably after Raymond's final interaction with ncurses), they continued to demonstrate their support by misattributing my work to Eric Raymond (and others, depending on the work).
Of course there were also people (and still are) who are fans of slang and newt, and will emphasize its advantages. Notwithstanding the fact that after a few years I did get John Davis to tone down the rhetoric and stick to measurable facts, his fans are unpersuaded.
The (over-zealous) remarks from someone in the same group in 2006 prompted me to investigate just how much larger dialog was than whiptail. I was surprised to find that when counting the required libraries, whiptail was actually larger than dialog. Of course, I documented my findings in dialog's manpage.
Some people do read the manual, as noted in Ubuntu #347913. I noticed this report during my 1.2 review, prompting me to update the whiptail compatibility options.
The result of my 1.2 review is that scripts accepted by whiptail will also be accepted by dialog. Because the two programs differ in their support for word-wrapping and handling of escapes, there will be inevitably some differences in appearance.
Zenity's documentation refers to
gdialog. That was a fork of
dialog 0.6c which was part of the gnome-utils
package in 2002 (e.g., 2.0.2 2002/09/03), modified to use Gtk.
Some parts did not work, e.g., --gauge
.
Its documentation was minimal (see this). After a while, it was dropped.
Zenity was first released early in 2003 (see git). It was influenced by my work on dialog, as illustrated by its list of options. Those use the "interesting" options from Xdialog (calendar, file-selection). Comparing with the list of newer dialog options, you will see some borrowing.
-h --about --auto-close --auto-kill --calendar --cancel-label --checklist
--class --column --confirm-overwrite --date-format --day --directory
--display --editable --entry --entry-text --error --file-filter
--file-selection --filename --g-fatal-warnings --gtk-module --height --help
--help-all --help-calendar --help-entry --help-error --help-file-selection
--help-general --help-gtk --help-info --help-list --help-misc
--help-notification --help-progress --help-question --help-scale
--help-text-info --help-warning --hide-column --hide-header --hide-text
--hide-value --info --list --listen --max-value --min-value --month
--multiple --name --no-wrap --notification --ok-label --percentage
--print-column --print-partial --progress --pulsate --question --radiolist
--save --scale --screen --separator --step --sync --text --text-info
--timeout --title --value --version --warning --width --window-icon --year
However, there is no script provided with zenity to handle scripts which are newer than dialog 0.6c.
Kdialog is less compatible with dialog than zenity. To illustrate the problem, here is the corresponding list of options:
--
--attach --author --calendar --checklist --combobox --default --dontagain
--error --getcolor --getexistingdirectory --geticon --getopenfilename
--getopenurl --getsavefilename --getsaveurl --help --help-all --help-kde
--help-qt --inputbox --license --menu --msgbox --multiple --passivepopup
--password --print-winid --progressbar --radiolist --separate-output
--slider --sorry --textbox --textinputbox --title --warningcontinuecancel
--warningyesno --warningyesnocancel --yesno --yesnocancel -v
However (see git) it is an inactive project.
This was written as a clone of dialog, but though the command-line repertoire is copied (and even imitated as in the --help message). On committing to FreeBSD, its author made no mention of that fact in documentation.
After some discussion, its developer proposed a slight improvement, which fell short of the usual conventions in this area (see first update, and followup). The first update is problematic (at best misleading):
It was introduced to provide a permissive open source alternative to the dialog utility for use by the FreeBSD base system.
Besides the oblique reference to dialog in a followup
implementing some feature described in the dialog manual
the developer misled the unwary reader to assume that the license used by dialog (i.e., LGPL, the most suitable compromise available given its history) is not an open source license. It is less permissive than BSD-2, but referring to LGPL as “non-permissive” is untruthful.
The developer's goals were clearly outlined in the FreeBSD Quarterly Status Report 2nd Quarter 2011:
The purpose of this project is to provide an utility and a library to build scripts and tools with UI Widgets in a terminal. The project is inspired by Dialog; however BSDDialog is released under the terms of the BSD-2-Clause License while Dialog is licensed as LGPL so a link of the project has been added to the "GPL Software in the Base System" wiki page.
The aim is to provide full compatibility with the dialog utility (the challenge is to implement over seventy options and almost thirty widgets). The API compatibility with the library is not a priority because libbsddialog should meet FreeBSD’s needs, for example it provides the new mixedlist() function, it can take as argument a set of: checklists, radiolists and separators, so it could be useful for building a dialog4ports clone: easier to implement and not depending on non-permissive dependencies.
There is a wide gap between some feature and full compatbility. In a quick inspection of the manual pages:
dialog has 29 widgets, 78 other options,
bsddialog 0.1 lists 19 widgets, 69 other options,
bsddialog 0.1 reimplements 19 widgets and 48 options.
A few are deprecated (e.g., --no-ok
versus
--nook
), rather than being new features.
An early example (2004) using UTF-8:
This page has more examples.
You should report bugs either to me. or to the ncurses mailing list [email protected].