# Color [![GoDoc](http://img.shields.io/badge/go-documentation-blue.svg?style=flat-square)](http://godoc.org/github.com/fatih/color) [![Build Status](http://img.shields.io/travis/fatih/color.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/fatih/color) Color lets you use colorized outputs in terms of [ANSI Escape Codes](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Colors) in Go (Golang). It has support for Windows too! The API can be used in several ways, pick one that suits you. ![Color](http://i.imgur.com/c1JI0lA.png) ## Install ```bash go get github.com/fatih/color ``` ## Examples ### Standard colors ```go // Print with default helper functions color.Cyan("Prints text in cyan.") // A newline will be appended automatically color.Blue("Prints %s in blue.", "text") // These are using the default foreground colors color.Red("We have red") color.Magenta("And many others ..") ``` ### Mix and reuse colors ```go // Create a new color object c := color.New(color.FgCyan).Add(color.Underline) c.Println("Prints cyan text with an underline.") // Or just add them to New() d := color.New(color.FgCyan, color.Bold) d.Printf("This prints bold cyan %s\n", "too!.") // Mix up foreground and background colors, create new mixes! red := color.New(color.FgRed) boldRed := red.Add(color.Bold) boldRed.Println("This will print text in bold red.") whiteBackground := red.Add(color.BgWhite) whiteBackground.Println("Red text with white background.") ``` ### Custom print functions (PrintFunc) ```go // Create a custom print function for convenience red := color.New(color.FgRed).PrintfFunc() red("Warning") red("Error: %s", err) // Mix up multiple attributes notice := color.New(color.Bold, color.FgGreen).PrintlnFunc() notice("Don't forget this...") ``` ### Insert into noncolor strings (SprintFunc) ```go // Create SprintXxx functions to mix strings with other non-colorized strings: yellow := color.New(color.FgYellow).SprintFunc() red := color.New(color.FgRed).SprintFunc() fmt.Printf("This is a %s and this is %s.\n", yellow("warning"), red("error")) info := color.New(color.FgWhite, color.BgGreen).SprintFunc() fmt.Printf("This %s rocks!\n", info("package")) // Use helper functions fmt.Printf("This", color.RedString("warning"), "should be not neglected.") fmt.Printf(color.GreenString("Info:"), "an important message." ) // Windows supported too! Just don't forget to change the output to color.Output fmt.Fprintf(color.Output, "Windows support: %s", color.GreenString("PASS")) ``` ### Plug into existing code ```go // Use handy standard colors color.Set(color.FgYellow) fmt.Println("Existing text will now be in yellow") fmt.Printf("This one %s\n", "too") color.Unset() // Don't forget to unset // You can mix up parameters color.Set(color.FgMagenta, color.Bold) defer color.Unset() // Use it in your function fmt.Println("All text will now be bold magenta.") ``` ### Disable color There might be a case where you want to disable color output (for example to pipe the standard output of your app to somewhere else). `Color` has support to disable colors both globally and for single color definition. For example suppose you have a CLI app and a `--no-color` bool flag. You can easily disable the color output with: ```go var flagNoColor = flag.Bool("no-color", false, "Disable color output") if *flagNoColor { color.NoColor = true // disables colorized output } ``` It also has support for single color definitions (local). You can disable/enable color output on the fly: ```go c := color.New(color.FgCyan) c.Println("Prints cyan text") c.DisableColor() c.Println("This is printed without any color") c.EnableColor() c.Println("This prints again cyan...") ``` ## Todo * Save/Return previous values * Evaluate fmt.Formatter interface ## Credits * [Fatih Arslan](https://github.com/fatih) * Windows support via @mattn: [colorable](https://github.com/mattn/go-colorable) ## License The MIT License (MIT) - see [`LICENSE.md`](https://github.com/fatih/color/blob/master/LICENSE.md) for more details