INKEY
INKEY and INKEY$ are BASIC functions to:
- wait a specified time for a character from the input stream
- test for a keypress
- return a value indicating the machine host/operating system type
Availability | Present in all versions of BBC BASIC. | |
Syntax | <numeric> = INKEY <numeric>
|
<string> = INKEY$ <numeric>
|
Token (hex) | A6 (function)
|
BF (function)
|
Description | Reads an character from the input stream. |
Contents
Description
INKEY
and INKEY$
call OSBYTE &81.
INKEY
returns a character or -1 for no character,
INKEY$
returns a one-character string or a null string if
nothing returned.
Wait for input character
Argument: >=0 Returns: >=0, character returned -1, timed out Example: key%=INKEY(200) REPEAT:k%=INKEY(10):PROCtick:UNTIL k%>-1 Some systems allow a delay value with b15 set to return a 16-bit "deep" keyvalue distinguishing between special keys, such as function keys, and top-bit characters.[1][2] Example: REPEAT:key%=INKEY(&80C8):UNTIL key%>-1 IF key%=&190 THEN PRINT "Shift-f0 pressed"
Scan for a particular key
Argument: -1..-128, negative key number Returns: TRUE, key pressed FALSE, key not pressed
Scan for a range of keys
Argument: -129...-255, lowest internal key number to start at EOR&7F Returns: internal key number pressed, or 255 for none
Check machine type
Argument: -256 Returns: A value with the low byte indicating the host (I/O) machine type: &00 BBC A/B with OS 0.10 &00 RM Nimus[3] &01 Acorn Electron OS &FF BBC Micro OS 1.00/1.20/1.23 (full value returned is -1) &FF Reuters OS R0.3 with *UK (full value returned is -1) &FE BBC Micro (American OS A1.0), Reuters OS R0.3 with *US &FE NetBSD &FD Master 128 MOS 3.20/3.50 &FC BBC Micro (West German MOS) - see note &FC Windows 32 &FB BBC B+ 64/128 (OS 2.00) &FB Beos (Brandy Basic) &FA Acorn Business Computer OS 1.00/2.00 &FA Cambridge Workstation OS 2.10 &FA DOS with DJGPP extender (Brandy BASIC) &F9 Linux &F8 MacOS X (Brandy Basic) &F7 Master ET MOS 4 &F7 FreeBSD &F6 OpenBSD &F5 Master Compact MOS 5 &F5 Amiga (Brandy Basic) &F4 Master 128 MOS 3.26 &F4 GNU FreeBSD (Brandy Basic) &F3 GNU (Brandy Basic) &Ex Spectrum &Dx Amstrad 464/664/6128, etc. &Cx Commodore 64/64+/128, etc. &Bx PDP11 Unix &B7 PDP11 Unix Version 7 &B6 PDP11 Unix Version 6 (INKEY-256 AND &F0)=&B0 gives TRUE for PDP11 hardware &Ax ARM-based systems &A0 Arthur 1.20 &A1 RISC OS 2.00 &A2 RISC OS 2.01 &A3 RISC OS 3.0x &A4 RISC OS 3.1x &A5 RISC OS 3.50 &A6 RISC OS 3.60 &A7 RISC OS 3.7x &A8 RISC OS 4.0x &A9 RISC OS 4.3x &AA RISC OS 5.xx &AF Springboard (An ARM-based development system plugged into a PC) (INKEY-256 AND &F0)=&A0 gives TRUE for ARM hardware &8x TI Calculator &68 6809 system &63 6309 system &73 BBC BASIC for ARM CPU on SDL abstraction (ie ASC"s") &57 BBC BASIC for Windows (ie ASC"W") &53 BBC BASIC for Intel CPU on SDL abstraction (ie ASC"S") (INKEY-256 AND &50)=&50 gives TRUE for R.T.Russell's BBC BASIC for Windows/SDL/etc
Depending on what the program needs to know, OSBYTE &00 is usually the more appropriate call to make.
Extensions
The parameter to INKEY is a 16-bit number. The standard implementation interprets that as:
<&8000 - wait for keypress &FF00+nn - scan for BBC keypress &FF00 - return host machine type
A parameter of &8000-&FEFF is undefined. Some systems extend INKEY as follows:
&FE00+nn - scan for low level DOS/Window VK_xxxx keypress (cZ80Tube, console library) &FC00+nn - scan for low level SDL1.2 SDK_xxx keypress (Brandy test builds) &8000+nn - wait for keypress, return 16-bit character code (cZ80Tube, console library)
See Also
- http://mdfs.net/Docs/Comp/BBC/Osbyte80
- http://mdfs.net/Docs/Comp/Acorn/HostVals
- http://mdfs.net/Docs/Comp/Acorn/Hosts
- What BASIC is running
- Negative INKEY numbers
References
- ↑ http://mdfs.net/Docs/Comp/KeyMap/Regular
- ↑ http://mdfs.net/System/C/Lib/console.txt
- ↑ Network User, Jan/Feb 1988, p9
Jgharston 12:27, 28 May 2009 (UTC) Jgharston (talk) 17:25, 5 July 2018 (CEST)