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@nasc/chalk

Terminal string styling done right

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IMPORTANT

This is the same chalk from .
The only change made to it is the support for "wrappers" in the effects.

There is a Pull Request opened to add it to Chalk, but while it is not merged (or in case it does not get approved) we can use this fork instead. If you want to help, you can check the Pull Request and the issue.
This is being temporarily published in npm so we can test it out a little further.



chalk


Terminal string styling done right

Build Status Coverage Status XO code style Mentioned in Awesome Node.js

See what's new in Chalk 2

Highlights

  • Expressive API
  • Highly performant
  • Ability to nest styles
  • 256/Truecolor color support
  • Auto-detects color support
  • Doesn't extend String.prototype
  • Clean and focused
  • Actively maintained
  • Used by ~23,000 packages as of December 31, 2017

Install

$ npm install chalk

Usage

const chalk = require('chalk');

console.log(chalk.blue('Hello world!'));

Chalk comes with an easy to use composable API where you just chain and nest the styles you want.

const chalk = require('chalk');
const log = console.log;

// Combine styled and normal strings
log(chalk.blue('Hello') + 'World' + chalk.red('!'));

// Compose multiple styles using the chainable API
log(chalk.blue.bgRed.bold('Hello world!'));

// Pass in multiple arguments
log(chalk.blue('Hello', 'World!', 'Foo', 'bar', 'biz', 'baz'));

// Nest styles
log(chalk.red('Hello', chalk.underline.bgBlue('world') + '!'));

// Nest styles of the same type even (color, underline, background)
log(chalk.green(
	'I am a green line ' +
	chalk.blue.underline.bold('with a blue substring') +
	' that becomes green again!'
));

// ES2015 template literal
log(`
CPU: ${chalk.red('90%')}
RAM: ${chalk.green('40%')}
DISK: ${chalk.yellow('70%')}
`);

// ES2015 tagged template literal
log(chalk`
CPU: {red ${cpu.totalPercent}%}
RAM: {green ${ram.used / ram.total * 100}%}
DISK: {rgb(255,131,0) ${disk.used / disk.total * 100}%}
`);

// Use RGB colors in terminal emulators that support it.
log(chalk.keyword('orange')('Yay for orange colored text!'));
log(chalk.rgb(123, 45, 67).underline('Underlined reddish color'));
log(chalk.hex('#DEADED').bold('Bold gray!'));

Easily define your own themes:

const chalk = require('chalk');

const error = chalk.bold.red;
const warning = chalk.keyword('orange');

console.log(error('Error!'));
console.log(warning('Warning!'));

Take advantage of console.log string substitution:

const name = 'Sindre';
console.log(chalk.green('Hello %s'), name);
//=> 'Hello Sindre'

API

chalk.<style>[.<style>...](string, [string...])

Example: chalk.red.bold.underline('Hello', 'world');

Chain styles and call the last one as a method with a string argument. Order doesn't matter, and later styles take precedent in case of a conflict. This simply means that chalk.red.yellow.green is equivalent to chalk.green.

Multiple arguments will be separated by space.

chalk.enabled

Color support is automatically detected, as is the level (see chalk.level). However, if you'd like to simply enable/disable Chalk, you can do so via the .enabled property.

Chalk is enabled by default unless explicitly disabled via the constructor or chalk.level is 0.

If you need to change this in a reusable module, create a new instance:

const ctx = new chalk.constructor({enabled: false});

chalk.level

Color support is automatically detected, but you can override it by setting the level property. You should however only do this in your own code as it applies globally to all Chalk consumers.

If you need to change this in a reusable module, create a new instance:

const ctx = new chalk.constructor({level: 0});

Levels are as follows:

  1. All colors disabled
  2. Basic color support (16 colors)
  3. 256 color support
  4. Truecolor support (16 million colors)

chalk.wrapper

The wrapper marks the unprintable characters from style tags.
A wrapper can be added to the styles, so you can escape characters or add marks to then.
By default, these wrappers are empty strings "".

The wrappers object has two properties, pre and post.
For example:

const ctx = new chalk.constructor({wrapper: {
	pre: '>',
	post: '<',
}});

ctx.red('foo') // outputs "><foo><"

This can be specially useful when escaping characters, using it into a PS1 string or debugging and outputing it into different terminals/TTYs.

chalk.supportsColor

Detect whether the terminal supports color. Used internally and handled for you, but exposed for convenience.

Can be overridden by the user with the flags --color and --no-color. For situations where using --color is not possible, add the environment variable FORCE_COLOR=1 to forcefully enable color or FORCE_COLOR=0 to forcefully disable. The use of FORCE_COLOR overrides all other color support checks.

Explicit 256/Truecolor mode can be enabled using the --color=256 and --color=16m flags, respectively.

Styles

Modifiers

  • reset
  • bold
  • dim
  • italic (Not widely supported)
  • underline
  • inverse
  • hidden
  • strikethrough (Not widely supported)
  • visible (Text is emitted only if enabled)

Colors

  • black
  • red
  • green
  • yellow
  • blue (On Windows the bright version is used since normal blue is illegible)
  • magenta
  • cyan
  • white
  • gray ("bright black")
  • redBright
  • greenBright
  • yellowBright
  • blueBright
  • magentaBright
  • cyanBright
  • whiteBright

Background colors

  • bgBlack
  • bgRed
  • bgGreen
  • bgYellow
  • bgBlue
  • bgMagenta
  • bgCyan
  • bgWhite
  • bgBlackBright
  • bgRedBright
  • bgGreenBright
  • bgYellowBright
  • bgBlueBright
  • bgMagentaBright
  • bgCyanBright
  • bgWhiteBright

Tagged template literal

Chalk can be used as a tagged template literal.

const chalk = require('chalk');

const miles = 18;
const calculateFeet = miles => miles * 5280;

console.log(chalk`
  There are {bold 5280 feet} in a mile.
  In {bold ${miles} miles}, there are {green.bold ${calculateFeet(miles)} feet}.
`);

Blocks are delimited by an opening curly brace ({), a style, some content, and a closing curly brace (}).

Template styles are chained exactly like normal Chalk styles. The following two statements are equivalent:

console.log(chalk.bold.rgb(10, 100, 200)('Hello!'));
console.log(chalk`{bold.rgb(10,100,200) Hello!}`);

Note that function styles (rgb(), hsl(), keyword(), etc.) may not contain spaces between parameters.

All interpolated values (chalk`${foo}`) are converted to strings via the .toString() method. All curly braces ({ and }) in interpolated value strings are escaped.

256 and Truecolor color support

Chalk supports 256 colors and Truecolor (16 million colors) on supported terminal apps.

Colors are downsampled from 16 million RGB values to an ANSI color format that is supported by the terminal emulator (or by specifying {level: n} as a Chalk option). For example, Chalk configured to run at level 1 (basic color support) will downsample an RGB value of #FF0000 (red) to 31 (ANSI escape for red).

Examples:

  • chalk.hex('#DEADED').underline('Hello, world!')
  • chalk.keyword('orange')('Some orange text')
  • chalk.rgb(15, 100, 204).inverse('Hello!')

Background versions of these models are prefixed with bg and the first level of the module capitalized (e.g. keyword for foreground colors and bgKeyword for background colors).

  • chalk.bgHex('#DEADED').underline('Hello, world!')
  • chalk.bgKeyword('orange')('Some orange text')
  • chalk.bgRgb(15, 100, 204).inverse('Hello!')

The following color models can be used:

  • rgb - Example: chalk.rgb(255, 136, 0).bold('Orange!')
  • hex - Example: chalk.hex('#FF8800').bold('Orange!')
  • keyword (CSS keywords) - Example: chalk.keyword('orange').bold('Orange!')
  • hsl - Example: chalk.hsl(32, 100, 50).bold('Orange!')
  • hsv - Example: chalk.hsv(32, 100, 100).bold('Orange!')
  • hwb - Example: chalk.hwb(32, 0, 50).bold('Orange!')
  • ansi16
  • ansi256

Windows

If you're on Windows, do yourself a favor and use cmder instead of cmd.exe.

Origin story

colors.js used to be the most popular string styling module, but it has serious deficiencies like extending String.prototype which causes all kinds of problems and the package is unmaintained. Although there are other packages, they either do too much or not enough. Chalk is a clean and focused alternative.

Maintainers

License

MIT

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 06 Feb 2018

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