Archive. Date of access: 12 Jan 2022

Marak 6bc50e79ee Bump to `v1.4.44-liberty-2` 2 anni fa
examples 56de9f0983 Add bright/light colors, closes #128 5 anni fa
lib 5d2d242f65 Fix bug 2 anni fa
screenshots 13dd5a84e3 Revert "Reverted to the latest tag" 9 anni fa
tests 56de9f0983 Add bright/light colors, closes #128 5 anni fa
themes 5aebc674d8 Add ESLint and lint all files; add lint check to CI 6 anni fa
.eslintrc.json 5aebc674d8 Add ESLint and lint all files; add lint check to CI 6 anni fa
.gitignore 5aebc674d8 Add ESLint and lint all files; add lint check to CI 6 anni fa
.npmignore f487e8ebad Fix #244 and #248 6 anni fa
.travis.yml 9bfb136eec more node versions 5 anni fa
LICENSE 5152d16f22 Update LICENSE 8 anni fa
README.md 7ddd6a3d65 Update docs: missing semicolon in sample code (#273) 4 anni fa
ROADMAP.md baa0e1c7dc update roadmap 5 anni fa
index.d.ts c76ec61860 spaces v tabs 6 anni fa
package-lock.json 56de9f0983 Add bright/light colors, closes #128 5 anni fa
package.json 6bc50e79ee Bump to `v1.4.44-liberty-2` 2 anni fa
safe.d.ts dc1ea49d2b Add missing setTheme definition 6 anni fa
safe.js 05129e7811 Revert dummy commit 6 anni fa

README.md

colors.js

Build Status version dependencies devDependencies

Please check out the roadmap for upcoming features and releases. Please open Issues to provide feedback, and check the develop branch for the latest bleeding-edge updates.

get color and style in your node.js console

Demo

Installation

npm install colors

colors and styles!

text colors

  • black
  • red
  • green
  • yellow
  • blue
  • magenta
  • cyan
  • white
  • gray
  • grey

bright text colors

  • brightRed
  • brightGreen
  • brightYellow
  • brightBlue
  • brightMagenta
  • brightCyan
  • brightWhite

background colors

  • bgBlack
  • bgRed
  • bgGreen
  • bgYellow
  • bgBlue
  • bgMagenta
  • bgCyan
  • bgWhite
  • bgGray
  • bgGrey

bright background colors

  • bgBrightRed
  • bgBrightGreen
  • bgBrightYellow
  • bgBrightBlue
  • bgBrightMagenta
  • bgBrightCyan
  • bgBrightWhite

styles

  • reset
  • bold
  • dim
  • italic
  • underline
  • inverse
  • hidden
  • strikethrough

extras

  • rainbow
  • zebra
  • america
  • trap
  • random

Usage

By popular demand, colors now ships with two types of usages!

The super nifty way

var colors = require('colors');

console.log('hello'.green); // outputs green text
console.log('i like cake and pies'.underline.red); // outputs red underlined text
console.log('inverse the color'.inverse); // inverses the color
console.log('OMG Rainbows!'.rainbow); // rainbow
console.log('Run the trap'.trap); // Drops the bass

or a slightly less nifty way which doesn't extend String.prototype

var colors = require('colors/safe');

console.log(colors.green('hello')); // outputs green text
console.log(colors.red.underline('i like cake and pies')); // outputs red underlined text
console.log(colors.inverse('inverse the color')); // inverses the color
console.log(colors.rainbow('OMG Rainbows!')); // rainbow
console.log(colors.trap('Run the trap')); // Drops the bass

I prefer the first way. Some people seem to be afraid of extending String.prototype and prefer the second way.

If you are writing good code you will never have an issue with the first approach. If you really don't want to touch String.prototype, the second usage will not touch String native object.

Enabling/Disabling Colors

The package will auto-detect whether your terminal can use colors and enable/disable accordingly. When colors are disabled, the color functions do nothing. You can override this with a command-line flag:

node myapp.js --no-color
node myapp.js --color=false

node myapp.js --color
node myapp.js --color=true
node myapp.js --color=always

FORCE_COLOR=1 node myapp.js

Or in code:

var colors = require('colors');
colors.enable();
colors.disable();

Console.log string substitution

var name = 'Marak';
console.log(colors.green('Hello %s'), name);
// outputs -> 'Hello Marak'

Custom themes

Using standard API


var colors = require('colors');

colors.setTheme({
  silly: 'rainbow',
  input: 'grey',
  verbose: 'cyan',
  prompt: 'grey',
  info: 'green',
  data: 'grey',
  help: 'cyan',
  warn: 'yellow',
  debug: 'blue',
  error: 'red'
});

// outputs red text
console.log("this is an error".error);

// outputs yellow text
console.log("this is a warning".warn);

Using string safe API

var colors = require('colors/safe');

// set single property
var error = colors.red;
error('this is red');

// set theme
colors.setTheme({
  silly: 'rainbow',
  input: 'grey',
  verbose: 'cyan',
  prompt: 'grey',
  info: 'green',
  data: 'grey',
  help: 'cyan',
  warn: 'yellow',
  debug: 'blue',
  error: 'red'
});

// outputs red text
console.log(colors.error("this is an error"));

// outputs yellow text
console.log(colors.warn("this is a warning"));

Combining Colors

var colors = require('colors');

colors.setTheme({
  custom: ['red', 'underline']
});

console.log('test'.custom);

Protip: There is a secret undocumented style in colors. If you find the style you can summon him.