1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
|
{
"name": "ansicolors",
"version": "0.3.2",
"description": "Functions that surround a string with ansicolor codes so it prints in color.",
"main": "ansicolors.js",
"scripts": {
"test": "node test/*.js"
},
"repository": {
"type": "git",
"url": "git://github.com/thlorenz/ansicolors.git"
},
"keywords": [
"ansi",
"colors",
"highlight",
"string"
],
"author": {
"name": "Thorsten Lorenz",
"email": "thlorenz@gmx.de",
"url": "thlorenz.com"
},
"license": "MIT",
"readmeFilename": "README.md",
"gitHead": "858847ca28e8b360d9b70eee0592700fa2ab087d",
"readme": "# ansicolors [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/thlorenz/ansicolors.png)](http://next.travis-ci.org/thlorenz/ansicolors)\n\nFunctions that surround a string with ansicolor codes so it prints in color.\n\nIn case you need styles, like `bold`, have a look at [ansistyles](https://github.com/thlorenz/ansistyles).\n\n## Installation\n\n npm install ansicolors\n\n## Usage\n\n```js\nvar colors = require('ansicolors');\n\n// foreground colors\nvar redHerring = colors.red('herring');\nvar blueMoon = colors.blue('moon');\nvar brighBlueMoon = colors.brightBlue('moon');\n\nconsole.log(redHerring); // this will print 'herring' in red\nconsole.log(blueMoon); // this 'moon' in blue\nconsole.log(brightBlueMoon); // I think you got the idea\n\n// background colors\nconsole.log(colors.bgYellow('printed on yellow background'));\nconsole.log(colors.bgBrightBlue('printed on bright blue background'));\n\n// mixing background and foreground colors\n// below two lines have same result (order in which bg and fg are combined doesn't matter)\nconsole.log(colors.bgYellow(colors.blue('printed on yellow background in blue')));\nconsole.log(colors.blue(colors.bgYellow('printed on yellow background in blue')));\n```\n\n## Advanced API\n\n**ansicolors** allows you to access opening and closing escape sequences separately.\n\n```js\nvar colors = require('ansicolors');\n\nfunction inspect(obj, depth) {\n return require('util').inspect(obj, false, depth || 5, true);\n}\n\nconsole.log('open blue', inspect(colors.open.blue));\nconsole.log('close bgBlack', inspect(colors.close.bgBlack));\n\n// => open blue '\\u001b[34m'\n// close bgBlack '\\u001b[49m'\n```\n\n## Tests\n\nLook at the [tests](https://github.com/thlorenz/ansicolors/blob/master/test/ansicolors.js) to see more examples and/or run them via: \n\n npm explore ansicolors && npm test\n\n## Alternatives\n\n**ansicolors** tries to meet simple use cases with a very simple API. However, if you need a more powerful ansi formatting tool, \nI'd suggest to look at the [features](https://github.com/TooTallNate/ansi.js#features) of the [ansi module](https://github.com/TooTallNate/ansi.js).\n",
"bugs": {
"url": "https://github.com/thlorenz/ansicolors/issues"
},
"_id": "ansicolors@0.3.2",
"dist": {
"shasum": "665597de86a9ffe3aa9bfbe6cae5c6ea426b4979",
"tarball": "http://registry.npmjs.org/ansicolors/-/ansicolors-0.3.2.tgz"
},
"_from": "ansicolors@>=0.3.2 <0.4.0",
"_npmVersion": "1.3.11",
"_npmUser": {
"name": "thlorenz",
"email": "thlorenz@gmx.de"
},
"maintainers": [
{
"name": "thlorenz",
"email": "thlorenz@gmx.de"
}
],
"directories": {},
"_shasum": "665597de86a9ffe3aa9bfbe6cae5c6ea426b4979",
"_resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/ansicolors/-/ansicolors-0.3.2.tgz"
}
|