# Starting with cursive (2/3) ## Target goal This time, we'll work on a slightly bigger example, where the user will need to actually make some choices. Here is what the code will look like: ```rust,no_run use cursive::Cursive; use cursive::views::Dialog; fn main() { let mut siv = cursive::default(); siv.add_layer(Dialog::text("This is a survey!\nPress when you're ready.") .title("Important survey") .button("Next", show_next)); siv.run(); } fn show_next(s: &mut Cursive) { s.pop_layer(); s.add_layer(Dialog::text("Did you do the thing?") .title("Question 1") .button("Yes!", |s| show_answer(s, "I knew it! Well done!")) .button("No!", |s| show_answer(s, "I knew you couldn't be trusted!")) .button("Uh?", |s| s.add_layer(Dialog::info("Try again!")))); } fn show_answer(s: &mut Cursive, msg: &str) { s.pop_layer(); s.add_layer(Dialog::text(msg) .title("Results") .button("Finish", |s| s.quit())); } ``` ![Tutorial 2 goal](./tutorial_2.png) ## Preparation This time you're not a beginner anymore, so we'll skip the introduction! Let's start from a basic cursive application: ```rust,no_run fn main() { let mut siv = cursive::default(); siv.run(); } ``` ## Dialogs Instead of directly using a [`TextView`], we'll use a [`Dialog`] this time. A dialog is wrapper with a frame around another view, and optionally a title and/or buttons. [`Dialog::around`] directly takes a view, so we'll directly give it the `TextView`: ```rust,no_run use cursive::views::Dialog; use cursive::views::TextView; fn main() { let mut siv = cursive::default(); siv.add_layer(Dialog::around(TextView::new("..."))); siv.run(); } ``` Since creating a `Dialog` around a `TextView` is a pretty common task, [`Dialog::text`] is a shortcut function that directly does that. Our line becomes a little shorter (and we don't need to import `cursive::views::TextView` anymore): ```rust,ignore siv.add_layer(Dialog::text("...")); ``` Next, let's add a title. To do that, `Dialog` has a chainable [`Dialog::title`] method. It takes the dialog by value, and returns it back, making function chains easy: ```rust,ignore siv.add_layer(Dialog::text("...").title("...")); ``` This way of chaining methods to set-up the view is very common in cursive. Most views provide chainable variants of their methods, to allow creating the view and configuring it in one spot. [`TextView`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/views/struct.TextView [`Dialog`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/views/struct.Dialog.html [`Dialog::around`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/views/struct.Dialog.html#method.around [`Dialog::text`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/views/struct.Dialog.html#method.text [`Dialog::title`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/views/struct.Dialog.html#method.title ## Buttons Our dialog looks better than a `TextView` alone, but it's still missing some action. Adding some buttons there will help. Just like with the title, `Dialog` has a [`Dialog::button`] method to add a button in a chain. This method takes a label and a callback, the same kind we saw in the previous tutorial: ```rust,ignore siv.add_layer(Dialog::text("...") .title("...") .button("Quit", |s| s.quit())); ``` Only this time, we don't want to exit the application right away. Instead of packing everything into the closure, let's use a separate function for the callback. Here's the current state: ```rust,no_run use cursive::Cursive; use cursive::views::Dialog; fn main() { let mut siv = cursive::default(); siv.add_layer(Dialog::text("This is a survey!\nPress when you're ready.") .title("Important survey") .button("Next", show_next)); siv.run(); } fn show_next(_: &mut Cursive) { // Empty for now } ``` [`Dialog::button`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/views/struct.Dialog.html#method.button ## Layers After the user presses the `` button, we want to hide the current popup and show a new one instead. We'll use [`Cursive::pop_layer`] to do that. Then, we add a new `Dialog`, this time with a few more buttons: ```rust,ignore fn show_next(s: &mut Cursive) { s.pop_layer(); s.add_layer(Dialog::text("Did you do the thing?") .title("Question 1") .button("Yes!", |s| ()) //< Do something interesting here... .button("No!", |s| ()) //< And here as well... .button("Uh?", |s| ())); //< And finally here too. } ``` As you see, `Dialog::button()` can be called several times to add more buttons. The `` button will add a new popup, without removing the current one: it'll act as a dismissable infobox. `Dialog::info()` is a shortcut to build such a popup: ```rust,ignore fn show_next(s: &mut Cursive) { s.pop_layer(); s.add_layer(Dialog::text("Did you do the thing?") .title("Question 1") .button("Yes!", |s| ()) //< We'll fill this callback soon, .button("No!", |s| ()) //< along with this one. .button("Uh?", |s| s.add_layer(Dialog::info("Try again!")))); } ``` Finally, let's have the "Yes" and "No" buttons use the same callback method to print a message, but with a different text parameter: ```rust,ignore fn show_next(s: &mut Cursive) { s.pop_layer(); s.add_layer(Dialog::text("Did you do the thing?") .title("Question 1") .button("Yes!", |s| show_answer(s, "I knew it! Well done!")) .button("No!", |s| show_answer(s, "I knew you couldn't be trusted!")) .button("Uh?", |s| s.add_layer(Dialog::info("Try again!")))); } fn show_answer(s: &mut Cursive, msg: &str) { s.pop_layer(); s.add_layer(Dialog::text(msg) .title("Results") .button("Finish", |s| s.quit())); } ``` Here, `show_answer()` does the same thing: remove the previous layer, and add a new `Dialog` instead. [`Cursive::pop_layer`]: https://docs.rs/cursive/0/cursive/struct.Cursive.html#method.pop_layer ## Conclusion Your code should now look like the one at the top of this guide. As you've seen, the `Dialog` view is a nice way to present a `TextView`, but it also works with any other content. Actually, most layers you'll add will start with a `Dialog` wrapping some other view. Next: [Starting with Cursive (3/3)](./tutorial_3.md)