Colorful worry-free console applications for Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.


Keywords
Shell, Bash, ANSI, ASCII, terminal, console, colors, automatic
License
MIT
Install
pip install colorclass==2.0.0

Documentation

colorclass

Yet another ANSI color text library for Python. Provides "auto colors" for dark/light terminals. Works on Linux, OS X, and Windows. For Windows support you just need to call Windows.enable() in your application.

On Linux/OS X autocolors are toggled by calling set_light_background() and set_dark_background(). On Windows this can be done automatically if you call Windows.enable(auto_colors=True). Even though the latest Windows 10 does support ANSI color codes natively, you still need to run Windows.enable() to take advantage of automatically detecting the console's background color.

In Python2.x this library subclasses unicode, while on Python3.x it subclasses str.

  • Python 2.6, 2.7, PyPy, PyPy3, 3.3, 3.4, and 3.5 supported on Linux and OS X.
  • Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, and 3.5 supported on Windows (both 32 and 64 bit versions of Python).

Quickstart

Install:

    pip install colorclass

Piped Command Line

It is possible to pipe curly-bracket tagged (or regular ANSI coded) text to Python in the command line to produce color text. Some examples:

    echo "{red}Red{/red}" |python -m colorclass  # Red colored text.
    echo -e "\033[31mRed\033[0m" | COLOR_DISABLE=true python -m colorclass  # Strip colors
    echo -e "\033[31mRed\033[0m" | COLOR_ENABLE=true python -m colorclass &> file.txt  # Force colors.

Export these environment variables as "true" to enable/disable some features:

=============== ============================================
Env Variable    Description
=============== ============================================
COLOR_ENABLE    Force colors even when piping to a file.
COLOR_DISABLE   Strip all colors from incoming text.
COLOR_LIGHT     Use light colored text for dark backgrounds.
COLOR_DARK      Use dark colored text for light backgrounds.
=============== ============================================

Example Implementation

Example Script Screenshot

Example Windows Screenshot

Source code for the example code is: example.py

Usage

Different colors are chosen using curly-bracket tags, such as {red}{/red}. For a list of available colors, call colorclass.list_tags().

The available "auto colors" tags are:

  • autoblack
  • autored
  • autogreen
  • autoyellow
  • autoblue
  • automagenta
  • autocyan
  • autowhite
  • autobgblack
  • autobgred
  • autobggreen
  • autobgyellow
  • autobgblue
  • autobgmagenta
  • autobgcyan
  • autobgwhite

Methods of Class instances try to return sane data, such as:

    from colorclass import Color
    color_string = Color('{red}Test{/red}')

    >>> color_string
    u'\x1b[31mTest\x1b[39m'

    >>> len(color_string)
    4

    >>> color_string.istitle()
    True

There are also a couple of helper attributes for all Color instances:

    >>> color_string.value_colors
    '\x1b[31mTest\x1b[39m'

    >>> color_string.value_no_colors
    'Test'

Change Log