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Golang ultimate ANSI-colors that supports Printf/Sprintf methods

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Aurora

GoDoc WTFPL License Build Status Coverage Status GoReportCard Gitter

Ultimate ANSI colors for Golang. The package supports Printf/Sprintf etc.

aurora logo

Installation

Get

go get -u github.com/logrusorgru/aurora

Test

go test -cover github.com/logrusorgru/aurora

Usage

Simple

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	. "github.com/logrusorgru/aurora"
)

func main() {
	fmt.Println("Hello,", Magenta("Aurora"))
	fmt.Println(Bold(Cyan("Cya!")))
}

simple png

Printf

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	. "github.com/logrusorgru/aurora"
)

func main() {
	fmt.Printf("Got it %d times\n", Green(1240))
	fmt.Printf("PI is %+1.2e\n", Cyan(3.14))
}

printf png

aurora.Sprintf

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	. "github.com/logrusorgru/aurora"
)

func main() {
	fmt.Println(Sprintf(Magenta("Got it %d times"), Green(1240)))
}

sprintf png

Enable/Disable colors

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"flag"

	"github.com/logrusorgru/aurora"
)

// colorizer
var au aurora.Aurora

var colors = flag.Bool("colors", false, "enable or disable colors")

func init() {
	flag.Parse()
	au = aurora.NewAurora(*colors)
}

func main() {
	// use colorizer
	fmt.Println(au.Green("Hello"))
}

Without flags: disable png

With -colors flag: enable png

Chains

The following samples are equal

x := BgMagenta(Bold(Red("x")))
x := Red("x").Bold().BgMagenta()

The second is more readable

Colorize

There is Colorize function that allows to choose some colors and format from a side

func getColors() Color {
	// some stuff that returns appropriate colors and format
}

// [...]

func main() {
	fmt.Println(Colorize("Greeting", getColors()))
}

Less complicated example

x := Colorize("Greeting", GreenFg|GrayBg|BoldFm)

Unlike other color functions and methods (such as Red/BgBlue etc) a Colorize clears previous colors

x := Red("x").Colorize(BgGreen) // will be with green background only

Grayscale

fmt.Println("  ",
	Gray(1-1, " 00-23 ").BgGray(24-1),
	Gray(4-1, " 03-19 ").BgGray(20-1),
	Gray(8-1, " 07-15 ").BgGray(16-1),
	Gray(12-1, " 11-11 ").BgGray(12-1),
	Gray(16-1, " 15-07 ").BgGray(8-1),
	Gray(20-1, " 19-03 ").BgGray(4-1),
	Gray(24-1, " 23-00 ").BgGray(1-1),
)

grayscale png

8-bit colors

Methods Index and BgIndex implements 8-bit colors.

Index/BgIndex Meaning Foreground Background
0- 7 standard colors 30- 37 40- 47
8- 15 bright colors 90- 97 100-107
16-231 216 colors 38;5;n 48;5;n
232-255 24 grayscale 38;5;n 48;5;n

Supported colors & formats

  • formats
    • bold (1)
    • faint (2)
    • doubly-underline (21)
    • fraktur (20)
    • italic (3)
    • underline (4)
    • slow blink (5)
    • rapid blink (6)
    • reverse video (7)
    • conceal (8)
    • crossed out (9)
    • framed (51)
    • encircled (52)
    • overlined (53)
  • background and foreground colors, including bright
    • black
    • red
    • green
    • yellow (brown)
    • blue
    • magenta
    • cyan
    • white
    • 24 grayscale colors
    • 216 8-bit colors

All colors

linux png
white png

Standard and bright colors

linux black standard png linux white standard png

Formats are likely supported

formats supported gif

Formats are likely unsupported

formats rarely supported png

Limitations

There is no way to represent %T and %p with colors using a standard approach

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	. "github.com/logrusorgru/aurora"
)

func main() {
	r := Red("red")
	var i int
	fmt.Printf("%T %p\n", r, Green(&i))
}

Output will be without colors

aurora.value %!p(aurora.value={0xc42000a310 768 0})

The obvious workaround is Red(fmt.Sprintf("%T", some))

Licensing

Copyright © 2016-2109 The Aurora Authors. This work is free. It comes without any warranty, to the extent permitted by applicable law. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License, Version 2, as published by Sam Hocevar. See the LICENSE file for more details.

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