Colr
====

A python module for using terminal colors in linux. It contains a simple
``color`` function that accepts style and color names, and outputs a
string with escape codes, but also has all colors and styles as
chainable methods on the ``Colr`` object.

--------------

Dependencies:
-------------

System
~~~~~~

-  **Python 3.5+** - This library uses ``yield from`` and the ``typing``
   module. `Python 2 support is not planned. <#python-2>`__

Modules
~~~~~~~

*There are no dependencies required for importing this library on
Linux*, however:

-  `Docopt <https://github.com/docopt/docopt>`__ - Only required for the
   `command line tool <#colr-tool>`__, not the library itself.
-  `Colorama <https://github.com/tartley/colorama>`__ - `Windows
   only <#windows>`__. This is not required on linux. It provides a
   helper for basic color support for Windows.

Installation:
-------------

Colr is listed on `PyPi <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Colr>`__, and can
be installed using `pip <https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/installing/>`__:

::

    pip install colr

Or you can clone the repo on
`GitHub <https://github.com/welbornprod/colr>`__ and install it from the
command line:

::

    git clone https://github.com/welbornprod/colr.git
    cd colr
    python3 setup.py install

Examples:
---------

Simple:
~~~~~~~

.. code:: python

    from colr import color
    print(color('Hello world.', fore='red', style='bright'))

Chainable:
~~~~~~~~~~

.. code:: python

    from colr import Colr as C
    print(
        C()
        .bright().red('Hello ')
        .normal().blue('World')
    )

    # Background colors start with 'bg', and AttributeError will be raised on
    # invalid method names.
    print(C('Hello ', fore='red').bgwhite().blue('World'))

Examples (256 Colors):
----------------------

Simple:
~~~~~~~

.. code:: python

    from colr import color
    # Invalid color names/numbers raise a ValueError.
    print(color('Hello world', fore=125, back=80))

Chainable:
~~~~~~~~~~

.. code:: python

    from colr import Colr as C
    # Foreground colors start with 'f_'
    # Background colors start with 'b_'
    print(C().f_125().b_80('Hello World'))

--------------

Other methods:
--------------

The ``Colr`` object has several helper methods. The ``color()`` method
returns a ``str``, but the rest return a ``Colr`` instance so they can
be chained. A chainable version of ``color()`` does exist
(``chained()``), but it's not really needed outside of the ``colr``
module itself.

Colr.center
~~~~~~~~~~~

Like ``str.center``, except it ignores escape codes.

.. code:: python

    Colr('Hello', fore='green').center(40)

Colr.format
~~~~~~~~~~~

Like ``str.format``, except it operates on ``Colr.data``.

.. code:: python

    Colr('Hello').blue(' {}').red(' {}').format('my', 'friend').center(40)

Colr.gradient
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Like ``rainbow()``, except a known name can be passed to choose the
color (same names as the basic fore colors).

.. code:: python

    (Colr('Wow man, ').gradient(name='red')
    .gradient('what a neat feature that is.', name='blue'))

Colr.gradient\_black
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Builds a black and white gradient. The default starting color is black,
but white will be used if ``reverse=True`` is passed. Like the other
``gradient/rainbow`` functions, if you pass a ``fore`` color, the
background will be gradient.

.. code:: python

    (C('Why does it have to be black or white?').gradient_black(step=3)
    .gradient_black(' ' * 10, fore='reset', reverse=True))

Colr.join
~~~~~~~~~

Joins ``Colr`` instances or other types together. If anything except a
``Colr`` is passed, ``str(thing)`` is called before joining. ``join``
accepts multiple args, and any list-like arguments are flattened at
least once (simulating str.join args).

.. code:: python

    Colr('alert', 'red').join('[', ']').yellow(' This is neat.')

Colr.ljust
~~~~~~~~~~

Like ``str.ljust``, except it ignores escape codes.

.. code:: python

    Colr('Hello', 'blue').ljust(40)

Colr.rainbow
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Beautiful rainbow gradients in the same style as
`lolcat <https://github.com/busyloop/lolcat>`__. This method is
incapable of doing black and white gradients. That's what
``gradient_black()`` is for.

.. code:: python

    C('This is really pretty.').rainbow(freq=.5)

Colr.rjust
~~~~~~~~~~

Like ``str.rjust``, except it ignores escape codes.

.. code:: python

    Colr('Hello', 'blue').rjust(40)

Colr.str
~~~~~~~~

The same as calling ``str()`` on a ``Colr`` instance.

.. code:: python

    Colr('test', 'blue').str() == str(Colr('test', 'blue'))

Colr.stripped
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The same as calling ``strip_codes(Colr().data)``.

.. code:: python

    data = 'Testing this.'
    colored = Colr(data, fore='red')
    data == colored.stripped()

Colr.\_\_add\_\_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Strings can be added to a ``Colr`` and the other way around. Both return
a ``Colr`` instance.

.. code:: python

    Colr('test', 'blue') + 'this' == Colr('').join(Colr('test', 'blue'), 'this')
    'test' + Colr('this', 'blue') == Colr('').join('test', Colr(' this', 'blue'))

Colr.\_\_call\_\_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

``Colr`` instances are callable themselves. Calling a ``Colr`` will
append text to it, with the same arguments as ``color()``.

.. code:: python

    Colr('One', 'blue')(' formatted', 'red')(' string.', 'blue')

Colr.\_\_eq\_\_, \_\_ne\_\_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

``Colr`` instances can also be compared with other ``Colr`` instances.
They are equal if ``self.data`` is equal to ``other.data``.

.. code:: python

    Colr('test', 'blue') == Colr('test', 'blue')
    Colr('test', 'blue') != Colr('test', 'red')

Colr.\_\_lt\_\_, \_\_gt\_\_, \_\_le\_\_, \_\_ge\_\_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Escape codes are stripped for less-than/greater-than comparisons.

.. code:: python

    Colr('test', 'blue') < Colr('testing', 'blue')

Colr.\_\_getitem\_\_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Escape codes are stripped when subscripting/indexing.

.. code:: python

    Colr('test', 'blue')[2] == Colr('s')
    Colr('test', 'blue')[1:3] == Colr('es')

Colr.\_\_mul\_\_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

``Colr`` instances can be multiplied by an ``int`` to build color
strings. These are all equal:

.. code:: python

    Colr('*', 'blue') * 2
    Colr('*', 'blue') + Colr('*', 'blue')
    Colr('').join(Colr('*', 'blue'), Colr('*', 'blue'))

--------------

Color Translation:
------------------

The ``colr`` module also includes several tools for converting from one
color value to another:

ColorCode
~~~~~~~~~

A class that automatically converts hex, rgb, or terminal codes to the
other types. They can be accessed through the attributes ``code``,
``hexval``, and ``rgb``.

.. code:: python

    from colr import ColorCode
    print(ColorCode(30))
    # Terminal:  30, Hex: 008787, RGB:   0, 135, 135

    print(ColorCode('de00fa'))
    # Terminal: 165, Hex: de00fa, RGB: 222,   0, 250

    print(ColorCode((75, 50, 178)))
    # Terminal:  61, Hex: 4b32b2, RGB:  75,  50, 178

Printing ``ColorCode(45).example()`` will show the actual color in the
terminal.

hex2rgb
~~~~~~~

Converts a hex color (``#000000``) to RGB ``(0, 0, 0)``.

hex2term
~~~~~~~~

Converts a hex color to terminal code number.

.. code:: python

    from colr import color, hex2term
    print(color('Testing', hex2term('#FF0000')))

hex2termhex
~~~~~~~~~~~

Converts a hex color to it's closest terminal color in hex.

.. code:: python

    from colr import hex2termhex
    hex2termhex('005500') == '005f00'

rgb2hex
~~~~~~~

Converts an RGB value ``(0, 0, 0)`` to it's hex value (``000000``).

rgb2term
~~~~~~~~

Converts an RGB value to terminal code number.

.. code:: python

    from colr import color, rgb2term
    print(color('Testing', rgb2term(0, 255, 0)))

rgb2termhex
~~~~~~~~~~~

Converts an RGB value to it's closest terminal color in hex.

.. code:: python

    from colr import rgb2termhex
    rgb2termhex(0, 55, 0) == '005f00'

term2hex
~~~~~~~~

Converts a terminal code number to it's hex value.

.. code:: python

    from colr import term2hex
    term2hex(30) == '008787'

term2rgb
~~~~~~~~

Converts a terminal code number to it's RGB value.

.. code:: python

    from colr import term2rgb
    term2rgb(30) == (0, 135, 135)

--------------

Colr Tool:
----------

The ``colr`` package can be used as a command line tool:

::

    python3 -m colr --help

It will do fore, back, style, gradients, rainbows, justification, and
translation. It can strip codes from text (as an argument or stdin), or
explain the codes found in the text.

`lolcat <https://github.com/busyloop/lolcat>`__ emulation:

::

    fortune | python3 -m colr --rainbow

The colr tool does not read files, but it's not a problem:

::

    cat myfile.txt | python3 -m colr --gradient red

Also see `ccat <https://github.com/welbornprod/ccat>`__.

--------------

Contributing:
-------------

As always contributions are welcome here. If you think you can improve
something, or have a good idea for a feature, please file an
`issue <https://github.com/welbornprod/colr/issues/new>`__ or a `pull
request <https://github.com/welbornprod/colr/compare>`__.

--------------

Notes:
------

Reasons
~~~~~~~

In the past, I used a simple ``color()`` function because I'm not fond
of the string concatenation style that other libraries use. The 'clor'
javascript library uses method chaining because that style suits
javascript, but I wanted to make it available to Python also, at least
as an option.

Reset Codes
~~~~~~~~~~~

The reset code is appended to all text unless the text is empty. This
makes it possible to build background colors and styles, but also have
separate styles for separate pieces of text.

Python 2
~~~~~~~~

I don't really have the desire to back-port this to Python 2. It
wouldn't need too many changes, but I like the Python 3 features
(``yield from``, ``str/bytes``).

Windows
~~~~~~~

Basic colors are supported on Windows through the
`colorama <https://github.com/tartley/colorama>`__ library. It is only
imported if ``platform.system() == 'Windows'``. It provides a wrapper
around ``stdout`` and ``stderr`` to make basic ansi codes work. If the
import fails, then all color codes are disabled (as if
``colr.disable()`` was called). I booted into Windows 8 for the first
time in months to make this little feature happen, only to discover that
the color situation for CMD and PowerShell really sucks. If you think
you can help improve the ``colr`` package for windows, please see the
`contributing <#contributing>`__ section.

Misc.
~~~~~

This library may be a little too flexible, and that may change:

.. code:: python

    from colr import Colr as C
    warnmsg = lambda s: C('warning', 'red').join('[', ']')(' ').green(s)
    print(warnmsg('The roof is on fire again.'))

.. figure:: https://welbornprod.com/static/media/img/colr-warning.png
   :alt: The possibilities are endless.

   The possibilities are endless.
