polyvariant / colorize-scala   0.3.2

GitHub

Scala microlibrary for ANSI colored strings.

Scala versions: 3.x 2.13 2.12
Scala.js versions: 1.x
Scala Native versions: 0.4

colorize-scala

Scala microlibrary for ANSI colored strings.

Installation

// for normal usage
"org.polyvariant" %% "colorize" % "0.3.2"
// for Scala.js / Scala Native
"org.polyvariant" %%% "colorize" % "0.3.2"

Usage

import org.polyvariant.colorize._

You can colorize any string by calling .colorize, .overlay, or one of the default helpers (we define one for each color in scala's AnsiColor trait):

"hello".red
// res0: string.ColorizedString = Overlay(
//   underlying = Wrap(s = "hello"),
//   color = Ansi(prefix = "\u001b[31m")
// )

If you colorize a string twice, the displayed color will be the one you used first. This also applies if the string is part of a larger colored string:

colorize"hello ${"world".blue}.red"
// res1: string.ColorizedString = Concat(
//   lhs = Wrap(s = "hello "),
//   rhs = Concat(
//     lhs = Wrap(s = ""),
//     rhs = Concat(
//       lhs = Overlay(
//         underlying = Wrap(s = "world"),
//         color = Ansi(prefix = "\u001b[34m")
//       ),
//       rhs = Wrap(s = ".red")
//     )
//   )
// )

This will render as "hello" in red and "world" in blue.

As you've seen, There's a colorize string interpolator which allows you to easily nest colorized strings in each other. You can also combine colorized strings with ++:

"hello ".red ++ "world".blue
// res2: string.ColorizedString = Concat(
//   lhs = Overlay(
//     underlying = Wrap(s = "hello "),
//     color = Ansi(prefix = "\u001b[31m")
//   ),
//   rhs = Overlay(
//     underlying = Wrap(s = "world"),
//     color = Ansi(prefix = "\u001b[34m")
//   )
// )

You can define a default way to colorize a type by creating an instance of the Colorize typeclass.

case class Taco(size: Int)

implicit val tacoColorize: Colorize[Taco] =
  taco => "Taco(".cyan ++ "size".yellow ++ " = " ++ taco.size.toString.red ++ ")".cyan

val taco = Taco(2)

colorize"you can colorize $taco"

Rendering

To actually render a colorized string, call .render.

println("hello".red.render) // like this

You can customize rendering, currently this is limited to passing a custom color suffix. Internally, colorize works by prepending the desired color sequence to your string and appending a suffix, and render's default suffix is Console.RESET.

RGB color support

If your terminal supports truecolor, you can display text colorized to an exact RGB value. Instead of the default import, use:

import org.polyvariant.colorize.trueColor._

"hello".rgb(255, 0, 0).render
// res6: String = "\u001b[38;2;255;0;0mhello\u001b[0m"

To automatically detect RGB support, use:

import org.polyvariant.colorize.auto._

"hello".rgb(255, 0, 0).render

If truecolor isn't available, rgb will be ignored. You can use this to implement an ANSI fallback:

// if RGB is ignored, `.red` will still be applied
"hello".rgb(255, 0, 0).red.render

Color removal

To remove all colors and other overlays from a colorized string, use .dropOverlays.

Customization

To apply customizations, you can make your own colorize by extending ConfiguredColorize. For example:

import org.polyvariant.colorize.custom._

object myColorize extends ConfiguredColorize(RenderConfig.Default.copy(resetString = "<RESET>"))

import myColorize._

println("hello".overlay("<RED>").render)
// <RED>hello<RESET>