Terminal string styling for Swift.
You can use The Swift Package Manager to install ColorizeSwift by adding it to your Package.swift file:
// swift-tools-version:4.0
// The swift-tools-version declares the minimum version of Swift required to build this package.
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
name: "MyLibrary",
products: [
.library(name: "MyLibrary", targets: ["MyLibrary"]),
],
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/mtynior/ColorizeSwift.git", from: "1.5.0"),
],
targets: [
.target(name: "MyLibrary", dependencies: ["ColorizeSwift"]),
.testTarget(name: "MyLibraryTests", dependencies: ["MyLibrary", "ColorizeSwift"]),
]
)
You can also manually add ColorizeSwift to you project:
- Download
ColorizeSwift.swift
file, - Drag
ColorizeSwift.swift
into you project's tree.
Please use SPM or add ColorizeSwift.swift
file manually to your project.
If you use CocoaPods, you can still use version 1.2
. At the moment, latest version1.5
, only removed support for CocoaPods and has the same functionality as 1.2
, but it might change in the future.
You can use CocoaPods to install ColorizeSwift
by adding it to your Podfile
:
platform :ios, '9.0'
use_frameworks!
target 'MyApp' do
pod 'ColorizeSwift'
end
Run pods install
to integrate pods with your project.
You can run sample application:
- Open Terminal and go to
Example
folder. - Run
./build.sh
script to build sample application. - Run
./example pacman
to launch sample.
Available samples:
print("Normal")
print("Bold".bold())
print("Dim".dim())
print("Italic".italic())
print("Underline".underline())
print("Blink".blink())
print("Reverse".reverse())
print("hidden".hidden())
print("strikethrough".strikethrough())
print("Red".red())
print("On yellow".onYellow())
print("256 foreground".foregroundColor(.orange1))
print("226 background".backgroundColor(.orange1))
print("Awful combination".colorize(.yellow, background: .red))
let nested = "with a blue substring".blue().underline()
print("A bold, green line \(nested) that becomes bold and green again".green().bold())
bold()
dim()
italic()
(not widely supported)underline()
reverse()
hidden()
strikethrough()
(not widely supported)reset()
black()
red()
green()
yellow()
blue()
magenta()
cyan()
lightGray()
darkGray()
lightRed()
lightGreen()
lightYellow()
lightBlue()
lightMagenta()
lightCyan()
white()
onBlack()
onRed()
onGreen()
onYellow()
onBlue()
onMagenta()
onCyan()
onLightGray()
onDarkGray()
onLightRed()
onLightGreen()
onLightYellow()
onLightBlue()
onLightMagenta()
onLightCyan()
onWhite()
You can also use 256 colors, but keep in mind that not all Terminal clients support them.
foregroundColor(color: TerminalColor)
backgroundColor(color: TerminalColor)
colorize(foreground: TerminalColor, background: TerminalColor)
You can access 256 colors using TerminalColor
enumeration.
Sometimes you only need the open code
for a modifier. You can access them using TerminalStyle
enum:
TerminalStyle.bold.open // "\u{001B}[1m"
TerminalStyle.bold.close // "\u{001B}[22m"
For 256 colors use:
TerminalColor.red.foregroundStyleCode().open //"\u{001B}[38;5;9m"
TerminalColor.red.backgroundStyleCode().open //"\u{001B}[48;5;9m"
To get string without any colorization use uncolorized()
method:
let styledString = "Awful combination".colorize(.yellow, background: .red) // \u{001B}[48;5;9m\u{001B}[38;5;11mAwful combination\u{001B}[0m\u{001B}[48;5;9m\u{001B}[0m
let withoutStyles = styledString.uncolorized() // "Awful combination"
Colorization can be disabled globally:
String.isColorizationEnabled = false // Default: true
You can use this to support a command line option (./example --no-color
):
String.isColorizationEnabled = !CommandLine.arguments.contains("--no-color")
To disable colorization when program is running in a pipe (./example | wc
) or when not writing to stdout
(./example > output.txt
):
String.isColorizationEnabled = (isatty(fileno(stdout)) == 1)
ColorizeSwift is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.