The idea here is that not every widget will scroll, and as such not every widget needs to have default bindings for calling the scrolling methods. Generally scrolling is something done in a container. These days we have *Scroll containers. As such it makes sense to introduce the bindings in a common parent class for those containers. This commit moves the binding from widget and creates that common parent class, and then has HorizontalScroll and VerticalScroll inherit from it. This is, it should be noted, a breaking change. Any code that creates a scrolling widget that assumes that the bindings are just there, where that widget doesn't inherit either from HorizontalScroll or VerticalScroll, will suddenly find that scrolling with the keyboard is no longer possible. See #2332.
Textual
Textual is a Rapid Application Development framework for Python.
Build sophisticated user interfaces with a simple Python API. Run your apps in the terminal and (coming soon) a web browser!
🎬 Demonstration
A quick run through of some Textual features.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/554369/197355913-65d3c125-493d-4c05-a590-5311f16c40ff.mov
About
Textual adds interactivity to Rich with an API inspired by modern web development.
On modern terminal software (installed by default on most systems), Textual apps can use 16.7 million colors with mouse support and smooth flicker-free animation. A powerful layout engine and re-usable components makes it possible to build apps that rival the desktop and web experience.
Compatibility
Textual runs on Linux, macOS, and Windows. Textual requires Python 3.7 or above.
Installing
Install Textual via pip:
pip install "textual[dev]"
The addition of [dev] installs Textual development tools. See the docs if you need help getting started.
Demo
Run the following command to see a little of what Textual can do:
python -m textual
Documentation
Head over to the Textual documentation to start building!
Join us on Discord
Join the Textual developers and community on our Discord Server.
Examples
The Textual repository comes with a number of examples you can experiment with or use as a template for your own projects.
🎬 Code browser
This is the code_browser.py example which clocks in at 61 lines (including docstrings and blank lines).
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/554369/197188237-88d3f7e4-4e5f-40b5-b996-c47b19ee2f49.mov
🎬 Stopwatch
This is the Stopwatch example from the tutorial.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/554369/197360718-0c834ef5-6285-4d37-85cf-23eed4aa56c5.mov
Reference commands
The textual command has a few sub-commands to preview Textual styles.
🎬 Easing reference
This is the easing reference which demonstrates the easing parameter on animation, with both movement and opacity. You can run it with the following command:
textual easing
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/554369/196157100-352852a6-2b09-4dc8-a888-55b53570aff9.mov
🎬 Borders reference
This is the borders reference which demonstrates some of the borders styles in Textual. You can run it with the following command:
textual borders
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/554369/196158235-4b45fb78-053d-4fd5-b285-e09b4f1c67a8.mov
🎬 Colors reference
This is a reference for Textual's color design system.
textual colors
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/554369/197357417-2d407aac-8969-44d3-8250-eea45df79d57.mov


