Cpick
An extensive color picker in the terminal.
Dependencies
Cpick depends on Tcell and Colors.
Cpick also uses Cview. However, Cview currently has a feature where the table cells are drawn with a required space in between cells, which ruins the aesthetic of Cpick. In order to fix this, a forked version of Cview is used within the Cpick package that has the required fixes. This may lead to bugs and issues in older versions of Cview that are not able to be readliy fixed until Cview adopts required features.
Installation
Golang
To include the Cpick package, include the line import "gitlab.com/ethanbakerdev/cpick"
.
To make a command based off of the package, run go install
in the cmd/cpick
directory. Command usage can be found in the docs.
Arch Linux (Arch User Repository)
Visit the AUR page to download Cpick to your arch system. If you don't know how to download a package from the Arch User Repository, you can follow directions from the Arch wiki.
Ubuntu/Debian
Coming soon!
Documentation
Documentation is present using Godoc.
Features
Cpick Settings
Cpick comes with two boolean settings: sandbox and testing.
Sandbox determines whether or not Cpick will return a color. Sandbox is useful for looking at colors that will be used somewhere else, like for a website. If sandbox is set to true
, Cpick will not return any value but will instead cycle between different color tables. Setting sandbox to false
means a color will be returned.
Testing is used to test coverage and validness of Cpick without requiring user input. Testing is useful for making sure Cpick can work on your device. Setting testing to true
turns on the test mode, while setting testing to false
keeps cpick on normal mode.
All of the tests can be found in the tests.go file (COMING SOON).
Controls/Keys
If you are looking for a simplified version, check out the docs. Here is a more in-depth explanation.
You can also see a minified help version by pressing ` while the Cpick application is running.
In Cpick, there are two main screens: the hue screen and the saturation-value screen.
The hue screen is the first screen that pops up. It contains a hue slider present at the top, two color tint previews on the left, and a table of different preset or custom colors at the bottom.
The saturation-value screen is the screen that pops up once you press enter to select a color on the hue screen. It contains one large color gradient in the center and two color tint previews on the right.
On the hue screen, you initially start off on the hue slider. This is where you can select a specific hue by navigating the table, either using h and l (from vim) or the left and right arrow. If you press enter, you will be moved to the saturation-value screen with the table representing the hue you chose. You can also press space to move to the listed colors at the bottom of the hue screen.
For the listed color table on the hue screen, you can navigate it using the standard vim keys (h, j, k, l) or the arrow keys. If you press enter on a selected color, you will be taken to the saturation-value screen and the color you selected will automatically be selected on the big color gradient table. You can also switch between color types by pressing c to go forward a page and C to go back.
In addition, you can press ? to open up a search menu. Here you can search for a specific color or keyword. You can press N to go to the next selection and n to go to the previous selection, just like in vim.
On the saturation-value screen, you can move about the screen using the standard vim keys (h, j, k, l) or the arrow keys. Once on a desired color, press enter to select it (take note that if you ran Cpick with sanbox as true, pressing enter on the table will take you back to the hue screen).
In addition, you can press g to go to the start of the table (top-left most cell) or G to go to the end of the table (bottom-right most cell).
Custom Colors
In Cpick, you can add custom colors that can come up on the color pages. You can add json files that hold the colors in 3 ways.
- Local Environment
Wherever you are running Cpick, you can provide a local colors.json
file (file would have the path ./colors.json
from wherever cpick is being run). This has the highest priority.
- ~/.config Directory
In the ~/.config
directory, you can create a cpick
directory that can contain the colors.json
file (file would have the path ~/.config/cpick/colors.json
). This has a lower priority than a local file but a higher priority than a ./cpick
directory..
- ~/.cpick Directory
In your home directory, you can create a .cpick
directory that can contain the colors.json
file (file would have the path ~/.cpick/colors.json
). This has the lowest priority.
The colors.json
has a very strict format.
{
"colorList": [
{
"name": "COLOR NAME 1",
"colors": []
},
{
"name": "COLOR NAME 2",
"colors": []
},
{
"name": "COLOR NAME 3",
"colors": []
}
]
}
Each color type consists of an object with a name
and colors
key. The name
key consists of what color type the colors provided are, such as CSS, Solarized, or XTERM. The colors
key holds all of the colors that will be previewed when Cpick is run. All of the different color types are in the colorList
array.
An individual color is an object that consists of two keys: name
and value
. name
is the name of the color and value
is the hexadecimal value of the color as a string. The "#" for the hexadecimal value is optional.
"colors": [
{"name": "Red", "value": "#FF0000"},
{"name": "Green", "value": "#00FF00"},
{"name": "Blue", "value": "#0000FF"}
]
Cpick comes with three color types as a default: CSS, Solarized, and XTERM. In order to fix complicated import problems, the json data is present in the colors.go file as a string. The preset data always has the lowest priority for being used.
Issues, Suggestions, and Patches
For issues and suggestions, please include as much useful information is possible. Make sure the issue is actually present or the suggestion is not inculded.
For patches, please submit them as pull requests.