Usage in Deno
import * as mod from "node:tty";
The node:tty
module provides the tty.ReadStream
and tty.WriteStream
classes. In most cases, it will not be necessary or possible to use this module
directly. However, it can be accessed using:
import tty from 'node:tty';
When Node.js detects that it is being run with a text terminal ("TTY")
attached, process.stdin
will, by default, be initialized as an instance of tty.ReadStream
and both process.stdout
and process.stderr
will, by
default, be instances of tty.WriteStream
. The preferred method of determining
whether Node.js is being run within a TTY context is to check that the value of
the process.stdout.isTTY
property is true
:
$ node -p -e "Boolean(process.stdout.isTTY)"
true
$ node -p -e "Boolean(process.stdout.isTTY)" | cat
false
In most cases, there should be little to no reason for an application to
manually create instances of the tty.ReadStream
and tty.WriteStream
classes.
Represents the readable side of a TTY. In normal circumstances process.stdin
will be the only tty.ReadStream
instance in a Node.js
process and there should be no reason to create additional instances.
Represents the writable side of a TTY. In normal circumstances, process.stdout
and process.stderr
will be the onlytty.WriteStream
instances created for a Node.js process and there
should be no reason to create additional instances.
The tty.isatty()
method returns true
if the given fd
is associated with
a TTY and false
if it is not, including whenever fd
is not a non-negative
integer.
-1 - to the left from cursor 0 - the entire line 1 - to the right from cursor