pub enum Lint {
DuplicatedTrailers,
PivotalTrackerIdMissing,
JiraIssueKeyMissing,
GitHubIdMissing,
SubjectNotSeparateFromBody,
SubjectLongerThan72Characters,
SubjectNotCapitalized,
SubjectEndsWithPeriod,
BodyWiderThan72Characters,
NotConventionalCommit,
NotEmojiLog,
}Expand description
The lints that are supported
Variants
DuplicatedTrailers
Check for duplicated trailers
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit
This is an example commit without any duplicate trailers
"
.into();
let actual = Lint::DuplicatedTrailers.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str = "An example commit
This is an example commit without any duplicate trailers
Signed-off-by: Billie Thompson <email@example.com>
Signed-off-by: Billie Thompson <email@example.com>
Co-authored-by: Billie Thompson <email@example.com>
Co-authored-by: Billie Thompson <email@example.com>
"
.into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit message has duplicated trailers".into(),
"These are normally added accidentally when you\'re rebasing or amending to a \
commit, sometimes in the text editor, but often by git hooks.\n\nYou can fix \
this by deleting the duplicated \"Co-authored-by\", \"Signed-off-by\" fields"
.into(),
Code::DuplicatedTrailers,
&message.into(),
Some(vec![
("Duplicated `Co-authored-by`".to_string(), 231, 51),
("Duplicated `Signed-off-by`".to_string(), 128, 50),
]),
Some(
"https://git-scm.com/docs/githooks#_commit_msg"
.parse()
.unwrap(),
),
));
let actual = Lint::DuplicatedTrailers.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);PivotalTrackerIdMissing
Check for a missing pivotal tracker id
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit [fixes #12345678]
"
.into();
let actual = Lint::PivotalTrackerIdMissing.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str = "An example commit
This is an example commit
"
.into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit message is missing a Pivotal Tracker ID".into(),
"It's important to add the ID because it allows code to be linked back to the stories it was done for, it can provide a chain of custody for code for audit purposes, and it can give future explorers of the codebase insight into the wider organisational need behind the change. We may also use it for automation purposes, like generating changelogs or notification emails.\n\nYou can fix this by adding the Id in one of the styles below to the commit message\n[Delivers #12345678]\n[fixes #12345678]\n[finishes #12345678]\n[#12345884 #12345678]\n[#12345884,#12345678]\n[#12345678],[#12345884]\nThis will address [#12345884]"
.into(),
Code::PivotalTrackerIdMissing,
&message.into(),
Some(vec![("No Pivotal Tracker ID".to_string(), 19, 26)]),
Some("https://www.pivotaltracker.com/help/api?version=v5#Tracker_Updates_in_SCM_Post_Commit_Hooks".parse().unwrap()),
));
let actual = Lint::PivotalTrackerIdMissing.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);JiraIssueKeyMissing
Check for a missing jira issue key
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit
Relates-to: JRA-123
"
.into();
let actual = Lint::JiraIssueKeyMissing.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str = "An example commit
This is an example commit
"
.into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit message is missing a JIRA Issue Key".into(),
"It's important to add the issue key because it allows us to link code back to the motivations for doing it, and in some cases provide an audit trail for compliance purposes.\n\nYou can fix this by adding a key like `JRA-123` to the commit message"
.into(),
Code::JiraIssueKeyMissing,&message.into(),
Some(vec![("No JIRA Issue Key".to_string(), 19, 26)]),
Some("https://support.atlassian.com/jira-software-cloud/docs/what-is-an-issue/#Workingwithissues-Projectkeys".parse().unwrap()),
));
let actual = Lint::JiraIssueKeyMissing.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);GitHubIdMissing
Check for a missing github id
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit
Relates-to: AnOrganisation/git-mit#642
"
.into();
let actual = Lint::GitHubIdMissing.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str = "An example commit
This is an example commit
"
.into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit message is missing a GitHub ID".into(),
"It's important to add the issue ID because it allows us to link code back to the motivations for doing it, and because we can help people exploring the repository link their issues to specific bits of code.\n\nYou can fix this by adding a ID like the following examples:\n\n#642\nGH-642\nAnUser/git-mit#642\nAnOrganisation/git-mit#642\nfixes #642\n\nBe careful just putting '#642' on a line by itself, as '#' is the default comment character"
.into(),
Code::GitHubIdMissing,&message.into(),Some(vec![("No GitHub ID".to_string(), 19, 26)]),
Some("https://docs.github.com/en/github/writing-on-github/working-with-advanced-formatting/autolinked-references-and-urls#issues-and-pull-requests".parse().unwrap()),
));
let actual = Lint::GitHubIdMissing.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);SubjectNotSeparateFromBody
Subject being not being seperated from the body
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit
Some Body Content
"
.into();
let actual = Lint::SubjectNotSeparateFromBody.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str = "An example commit
This is an example commit
"
.into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit message is missing a blank line between the subject and the body".into(),
"Most tools that render and parse commit messages, expect commit messages to be in the form of subject and body. This includes git itself in tools like git-format-patch. If you don't include this you may see strange behaviour from git and any related tools.\n\nTo fix this separate subject from body with a blank line"
.into(),
Code::SubjectNotSeparateFromBody,&message.into(),
Some(vec![("Missing blank line".to_string(), 18, 25)]),
Some("https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines".parse().unwrap()),
));
let actual = Lint::SubjectNotSeparateFromBody.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);SubjectLongerThan72Characters
Check for a long subject line
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit
Some Body Content
"
.into();
let actual = Lint::SubjectLongerThan72Characters.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message:String = "x".repeat(73).into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your subject is longer than 72 characters".into(),
"It's important to keep the subject of the commit less than 72 characters because when you look at the git log, that's where it truncates the message. This means that people won't get the entirety of the information in your commit.\n\nPlease keep the subject line 72 characters or under"
.into(),
Code::SubjectLongerThan72Characters,&message.clone().into(),
Some(vec![("Too long".to_string(), 73, 1)]),
Some("https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines".parse().unwrap()),
));
let actual = Lint::SubjectLongerThan72Characters.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);SubjectNotCapitalized
Check for a non-capitalised subject
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit\n".into();
let actual = Lint::SubjectNotCapitalized.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str =
"an example commit\n"
.into();
let expected = Some(
Problem::new(
"Your commit message is missing a capital letter".into(),
"The subject line is a title, and as such should be capitalised.\n\nYou can fix this by capitalising the first character in the subject".into(),
Code::SubjectNotCapitalized,&message.into(),
Some(vec![("Not capitalised".to_string(), 0, 1)]),
Some("https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines".parse().unwrap()),
)
);
let actual = Lint::SubjectNotCapitalized.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);SubjectEndsWithPeriod
Check for period at the end of the subject
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit\n".into();
let actual = Lint::SubjectEndsWithPeriod.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str =
"An example commit.\n".into();
let expected = Some(
Problem::new(
"Your commit message ends with a period".into(),
"It's important to keep your commits short, because we only have a limited number of characters to use (72) before the subject line is truncated. Full stops aren't normally in subject lines, and take up an extra character, so we shouldn't use them in commit message subjects.\n\nYou can fix this by removing the period"
.into(),
Code::SubjectEndsWithPeriod,&message.into(),
Some(vec![("Unneeded period".to_string(), 17, 1)]),
Some("https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines".parse().unwrap()),
)
);
let actual = Lint::SubjectEndsWithPeriod.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);BodyWiderThan72Characters
Check for a long body line
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "An example commit\n\nSome Body Content\n".into();
let actual = Lint::BodyWiderThan72Characters.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message:String = ["Subject".to_string(), "x".repeat(73).into()].join("\n\n");
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit has a body wider than 72 characters".into(),
"It's important to keep the body of the commit narrower than 72 characters because when you look at the git log, that's where it truncates the message. This means that people won't get the entirety of the information in your commit.\n\nYou can fix this by making the lines in your body no more than 72 characters"
.into(),
Code::BodyWiderThan72Characters,&message.clone().into(),
Some(vec![("Too long".parse().unwrap(), 81, 1)]),
Some("https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines".parse().unwrap())
));
let actual = Lint::BodyWiderThan72Characters.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);NotConventionalCommit
Check for commits following the conventional standard
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "refactor: An example commit\n\nSome Body Content\n".into();
let actual = Lint::NotConventionalCommit.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str =
"An example commit\n\nSome Body Content\n"
.into();
let expected = Some(Problem::new(
"Your commit message isn't in conventional style".into(),
"It's important to follow the conventional commit style when creating your commit message. By using this style we can automatically calculate the version of software using deployment pipelines, and also generate changelogs and other useful information without human interaction.\n\nYou can fix it by following style\n\n<type>[optional scope]: <description>\n\n[optional body]\n\n[optional footer(s)]"
.into(),
Code::NotConventionalCommit,&message.into(),Some(vec![("Not conventional".to_string(), 0, 17)]),Some("https://www.conventionalcommits.org/".to_string()),
));
let actual = Lint::NotConventionalCommit.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);NotEmojiLog
Check for commits following the emoji log standard
Examples
Passing
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let message: &str = "📖 DOC: An example commit\n\nSome Body Content\n".into();
let actual = Lint::NotEmojiLog.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert!(actual.is_none(), "Expected None, found {:?}", actual);Erring
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::{Code, Lint, Problem};
let message: &str =
"An example commit\n\nSome Body Content\n"
.into();
let expected = Some(
Problem::new(
"Your commit message isn't in emoji log style".into(),
"It's important to follow the emoji log style when creating your commit message. By using this style we can automatically generate changelogs.\n\nYou can fix it using one of the prefixes:\n\n\n📦 NEW:\n👌 IMPROVE:\n🐛 FIX:\n📖 DOC:\n🚀 RELEASE:\n🤖 TEST:\n‼\u{fe0f} BREAKING:"
.into(),
Code::NotEmojiLog,&message.into(),Some(vec![("Not emoji log".to_string(), 0, 17)]),Some("https://github.com/ahmadawais/Emoji-Log".to_string()),
));
let actual = Lint::NotEmojiLog.lint(&CommitMessage::from(message));
assert_eq!(
actual, expected,
"Expected {:?}, found {:?}",
expected, actual
);Implementations
sourceimpl Lint
impl Lint
sourcepub fn all_lints() -> impl Iterator<Item = Self>
pub fn all_lints() -> impl Iterator<Item = Self>
Iterator over all the lints
Examples
use mit_lint::Lint;
assert!(Lint::all_lints().next().is_some())sourcepub fn iterator() -> impl Iterator<Item = Self>
👎 Deprecated since 0.1.5: iterator was an unusual name. Use all_lints
pub fn iterator() -> impl Iterator<Item = Self>
iterator was an unusual name. Use all_lints
sourcepub fn enabled_by_default(self) -> bool
pub fn enabled_by_default(self) -> bool
Check if a lint is enabled by default
Examples
use mit_lint::Lint;
assert!(Lint::SubjectNotSeparateFromBody.enabled_by_default());
assert!(!Lint::NotConventionalCommit.enabled_by_default());sourcepub fn config_key(self) -> String
pub fn config_key(self) -> String
Get a key suitable for a configuration document
Examples
use mit_lint::Lint;
assert_eq!(
Lint::SubjectNotSeparateFromBody.config_key(),
"mit.lint.subject-not-separated-from-body"
);sourcepub fn lint(self, commit_message: &CommitMessage<'_>) -> Option<Problem>
pub fn lint(self, commit_message: &CommitMessage<'_>) -> Option<Problem>
Run this lint on a commit message
Examples
use mit_commit::CommitMessage;
use mit_lint::Lint;
let actual =
Lint::NotConventionalCommit.lint(&CommitMessage::from("An example commit message"));
assert!(actual.is_some());Trait Implementations
sourceimpl Ord for Lint
impl Ord for Lint
sourceimpl PartialOrd<Lint> for Lint
impl PartialOrd<Lint> for Lint
sourcefn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Lint) -> Option<Ordering>
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Lint) -> Option<Ordering>
This method returns an ordering between self and other values if one exists. Read more
1.0.0 · sourcefn lt(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
fn lt(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
This method tests less than (for self and other) and is used by the < operator. Read more
1.0.0 · sourcefn le(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
fn le(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
This method tests less than or equal to (for self and other) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
impl Copy for Lint
impl Eq for Lint
impl StructuralEq for Lint
impl StructuralPartialEq for Lint
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for Lint
impl Send for Lint
impl Sync for Lint
impl Unpin for Lint
impl UnwindSafe for Lint
Blanket Implementations
sourceimpl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
const: unstable · sourcefn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
impl<D> OwoColorize for D
impl<D> OwoColorize for D
fn fg<C>(&self) -> FgColorDisplay<'_, C, Self> where
C: Color,
fn fg<C>(&self) -> FgColorDisplay<'_, C, Self> where
C: Color,
Set the foreground color generically Read more
fn bg<C>(&self) -> BgColorDisplay<'_, C, Self> where
C: Color,
fn bg<C>(&self) -> BgColorDisplay<'_, C, Self> where
C: Color,
Set the background color generically. Read more
fn black(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Black, Self>
fn black(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Black, Self>
Change the foreground color to black
fn on_black(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Black, Self>
fn on_black(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Black, Self>
Change the background color to black
fn red(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Red, Self>
fn red(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Red, Self>
Change the foreground color to red
fn on_red(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Red, Self>
fn on_red(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Red, Self>
Change the background color to red
fn green(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Green, Self>
fn green(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Green, Self>
Change the foreground color to green
fn on_green(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Green, Self>
fn on_green(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Green, Self>
Change the background color to green
fn yellow(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Yellow, Self>
fn yellow(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Yellow, Self>
Change the foreground color to yellow
fn on_yellow(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Yellow, Self>
fn on_yellow(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Yellow, Self>
Change the background color to yellow
fn blue(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Blue, Self>
fn blue(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Blue, Self>
Change the foreground color to blue
fn on_blue(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Blue, Self>
fn on_blue(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Blue, Self>
Change the background color to blue
fn magenta(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
fn magenta(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
Change the foreground color to magenta
fn on_magenta(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
fn on_magenta(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
Change the background color to magenta
fn purple(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
fn purple(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
Change the foreground color to purple
fn on_purple(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
fn on_purple(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Magenta, Self>
Change the background color to purple
fn cyan(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Cyan, Self>
fn cyan(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Cyan, Self>
Change the foreground color to cyan
fn on_cyan(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Cyan, Self>
fn on_cyan(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Cyan, Self>
Change the background color to cyan
fn white(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, White, Self>
fn white(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, White, Self>
Change the foreground color to white
fn on_white(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, White, Self>
fn on_white(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, White, Self>
Change the background color to white
fn default_color(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Default, Self>
fn default_color(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, Default, Self>
Change the foreground color to the terminal default
fn on_default_color(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Default, Self>
fn on_default_color(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, Default, Self>
Change the background color to the terminal default
fn bright_black(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlack, Self>
fn bright_black(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlack, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright black
fn on_bright_black(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlack, Self>
fn on_bright_black(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlack, Self>
Change the background color to bright black
fn bright_red(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightRed, Self>
fn bright_red(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightRed, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright red
fn on_bright_red(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightRed, Self>
fn on_bright_red(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightRed, Self>
Change the background color to bright red
fn bright_green(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightGreen, Self>
fn bright_green(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightGreen, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright green
fn on_bright_green(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightGreen, Self>
fn on_bright_green(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightGreen, Self>
Change the background color to bright green
fn bright_yellow(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightYellow, Self>
fn bright_yellow(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightYellow, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright yellow
fn on_bright_yellow(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightYellow, Self>
fn on_bright_yellow(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightYellow, Self>
Change the background color to bright yellow
fn bright_blue(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlue, Self>
fn bright_blue(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlue, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright blue
fn on_bright_blue(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlue, Self>
fn on_bright_blue(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightBlue, Self>
Change the background color to bright blue
fn bright_magenta(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
fn bright_magenta(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright magenta
fn on_bright_magenta(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
fn on_bright_magenta(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
Change the background color to bright magenta
fn bright_purple(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
fn bright_purple(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright purple
fn on_bright_purple(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
fn on_bright_purple(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightMagenta, Self>
Change the background color to bright purple
fn bright_cyan(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightCyan, Self>
fn bright_cyan(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightCyan, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright cyan
fn on_bright_cyan(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightCyan, Self>
fn on_bright_cyan(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightCyan, Self>
Change the background color to bright cyan
fn bright_white(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightWhite, Self>
fn bright_white(&'a self) -> FgColorDisplay<'a, BrightWhite, Self>
Change the foreground color to bright white
fn on_bright_white(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightWhite, Self>
fn on_bright_white(&'a self) -> BgColorDisplay<'a, BrightWhite, Self>
Change the background color to bright white
fn bold(&'a self) -> BoldDisplay<'a, Self>
fn bold(&'a self) -> BoldDisplay<'a, Self>
Make the text bold
fn dimmed(&'a self) -> DimDisplay<'a, Self>
fn dimmed(&'a self) -> DimDisplay<'a, Self>
Make the text dim
fn italic(&'a self) -> ItalicDisplay<'a, Self>
fn italic(&'a self) -> ItalicDisplay<'a, Self>
Make the text italicized
fn underline(&'a self) -> UnderlineDisplay<'a, Self>
fn underline(&'a self) -> UnderlineDisplay<'a, Self>
Make the text italicized
fn blink(&'a self) -> BlinkDisplay<'a, Self>
fn blink(&'a self) -> BlinkDisplay<'a, Self>
Make the text blink
fn blink_fast(&'a self) -> BlinkFastDisplay<'a, Self>
fn blink_fast(&'a self) -> BlinkFastDisplay<'a, Self>
Make the text blink (but fast!)
fn reversed(&'a self) -> ReversedDisplay<'a, Self>
fn reversed(&'a self) -> ReversedDisplay<'a, Self>
Swap the foreground and background colors
Hide the text
fn strikethrough(&'a self) -> StrikeThroughDisplay<'a, Self>
fn strikethrough(&'a self) -> StrikeThroughDisplay<'a, Self>
Cross out the text
fn color<Color>(&self, color: Color) -> FgDynColorDisplay<'_, Color, Self> where
Color: DynColor,
fn color<Color>(&self, color: Color) -> FgDynColorDisplay<'_, Color, Self> where
Color: DynColor,
Set the foreground color at runtime. Only use if you do not know which color will be used at
compile-time. If the color is constant, use either OwoColorize::fg or
a color-specific method, such as OwoColorize::green, Read more
fn on_color<Color>(&self, color: Color) -> BgDynColorDisplay<'_, Color, Self> where
Color: DynColor,
fn on_color<Color>(&self, color: Color) -> BgDynColorDisplay<'_, Color, Self> where
Color: DynColor,
Set the background color at runtime. Only use if you do not know what color to use at
compile-time. If the color is constant, use either OwoColorize::bg or
a color-specific method, such as OwoColorize::on_yellow, Read more
fn fg_rgb<const R: u8, const G: u8, const B: u8>(
&self
) -> FgColorDisplay<'_, CustomColor<R, G, B>, Self>
fn fg_rgb<const R: u8, const G: u8, const B: u8>(
&self
) -> FgColorDisplay<'_, CustomColor<R, G, B>, Self>
Set the foreground color to a specific RGB value.
fn bg_rgb<const R: u8, const G: u8, const B: u8>(
&self
) -> BgColorDisplay<'_, CustomColor<R, G, B>, Self>
fn bg_rgb<const R: u8, const G: u8, const B: u8>(
&self
) -> BgColorDisplay<'_, CustomColor<R, G, B>, Self>
Set the background color to a specific RGB value.
fn truecolor(&self, r: u8, g: u8, b: u8) -> FgDynColorDisplay<'_, Rgb, Self>
fn truecolor(&self, r: u8, g: u8, b: u8) -> FgDynColorDisplay<'_, Rgb, Self>
Sets the foreground color to an RGB value.
fn on_truecolor(&self, r: u8, g: u8, b: u8) -> BgDynColorDisplay<'_, Rgb, Self>
fn on_truecolor(&self, r: u8, g: u8, b: u8) -> BgDynColorDisplay<'_, Rgb, Self>
Sets the background color to an RGB value.
sourceimpl<T> ToOwned for T where
T: Clone,
impl<T> ToOwned for T where
T: Clone,
type Owned = T
type Owned = T
The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
sourcefn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)
fn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)
toowned_clone_into)Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more