Expand description
This crate provides a cross platform abstraction for writing colored text to a terminal. Colors are written using either ANSI escape sequences or by communicating with a Windows console. Much of this API was motivated by use inside command line applications, where colors or styles can be configured by the end user and/or the environment.
This crate also provides platform independent support for writing colored text to an in memory buffer. While this is easy to do with ANSI escape sequences (because they are in the buffer themselves), it is trickier to do with the Windows console API, which requires synchronous communication.
In ANSI mode, this crate also provides support for writing hyperlinks.
§Organization
The WriteColor trait extends the io::Write trait with methods for setting
colors or resetting them.
StandardStream and StandardStreamLock both satisfy WriteColor and are
analogous to std::io::Stdout and std::io::StdoutLock, or std::io::Stderr
and std::io::StderrLock.
Buffer is an in memory buffer that supports colored text. In a parallel
program, each thread might write to its own buffer. A buffer can be printed to
using a BufferWriter. The advantage of this design is that each thread can
work in parallel on a buffer without having to synchronize access to global
resources such as the Windows console. Moreover, this design also prevents
interleaving of buffer output.
Ansi and NoColor both satisfy WriteColor for arbitrary implementors of
io::Write. These types are useful when you know exactly what you need. An
analogous type for the Windows console is not provided since it cannot exist.
§Example: using StandardStream
The StandardStream type in this crate works similarly to std::io::Stdout,
except it is augmented with methods for coloring by the WriteColor trait.
For example, to write some green text:
use std::io::Write;
use termcolor::{Color, ColorChoice, ColorSpec, StandardStream, WriteColor};
let mut stdout = StandardStream::stdout(ColorChoice::Always);
stdout.set_color(ColorSpec::new().set_fg(Some(Color::Green)))?;
writeln!(&mut stdout, "green text!")?;Note that any text written to the terminal now will be colored
green when using ANSI escape sequences, even if it is written via
stderr, and even if stderr had previously been set to Color::Red.
Users will need to manage any color changes themselves by calling
WriteColor::set_color, and this
may include calling WriteColor::reset
before the program exits to a shell.
§Example: using BufferWriter
A BufferWriter can create buffers and write buffers to stdout or stderr. It
does not implement io::Write or WriteColor itself. Instead, Buffer
implements io::Write and io::WriteColor.
This example shows how to print some green text to stderr.
use std::io::Write;
use termcolor::{BufferWriter, Color, ColorChoice, ColorSpec, WriteColor};
let mut bufwtr = BufferWriter::stderr(ColorChoice::Always);
let mut buffer = bufwtr.buffer();
buffer.set_color(ColorSpec::new().set_fg(Some(Color::Green)))?;
writeln!(&mut buffer, "green text!")?;
bufwtr.print(&buffer)?;§Detecting presence of a terminal
In many scenarios when using color, one often wants to enable colors
automatically when writing to a terminal and disable colors automatically when
writing to anything else. The typical way to achieve this in Unix environments
is via libc’s
isatty
function.
Unfortunately, this notoriously does not work well in Windows environments. To
work around that, the recommended solution is to use the standard library’s
IsTerminal trait.
It goes out of its way to get it as right as possible in Windows environments.
For example, in a command line application that exposes a --color flag,
your logic for how to enable colors might look like this:
use std::io::IsTerminal;
use termcolor::{ColorChoice, StandardStream};
let preference = argv.get_flag("color").unwrap_or("auto");
let mut choice = preference.parse::<ColorChoice>()?;
if choice == ColorChoice::Auto && !std::io::stdin().is_terminal() {
choice = ColorChoice::Never;
}
let stdout = StandardStream::stdout(choice);
// ... write to stdoutCurrently, termcolor does not provide anything to do this for you.
Structs§
- Ansi
- Satisfies
WriteColorusing standard ANSI escape sequences. - Buffer
- Write colored text to memory.
- Buffer
Writer - Writes colored buffers to stdout or stderr.
- Buffered
Standard Stream - Like
StandardStream, but does buffered writing. - Color
Choice Parse Error - An error that occurs when parsing a
ColorChoicefails. - Color
Spec - A color specification.
- Hyperlink
Spec - A hyperlink specification.
- NoColor
- Satisfies
WriteColorbut ignores all color options. - Parse
Color Error - An error from parsing an invalid color specification.
- Standard
Stream - Satisfies
io::WriteandWriteColor, and supports optional coloring to either of the standard output streams, stdout and stderr. - Standard
Stream Lock StandardStreamLockis a locked reference to aStandardStream.
Enums§
- Color
- The set of available colors for the terminal foreground/background.
- Color
Choice - ColorChoice represents the color preferences of an end user.
Traits§
- Write
Color - This trait describes the behavior of writers that support colored output.