Yet another crate implementing colorized text.
There was one primary design goal separating stylish from existing crates:
Applying styling to data should be decoupled from how that styling is output.
This came out of two usecases:
-
A library crate that renders a "diagnostic" representation of a data format (think something JSON-like). This library is being used in both a WASM based web application and a CLI application; in both cases these applications would be improved by adding some syntax highlighting to the rendered data, but in one case we want to output HTML while the other requires ANSI color codes.
-
A (different) CLI application which could use semantic coloring of different data types embedded in the output messages to make them easier to parse, with an option to turn the color off. To simplify toggling the color the rendering of the messages shouldn't need to continuously check whether color is currently on or not.
Along with this primary design goal, there was a secondary design goal:
Integrate into std::fmt as much as possible to leverage existing
knowledge.
We already have a standardized formatting infrastructure in std::fmt.
Developers already know how to work with this, and it is very easy to use. By
reusing that existing design and just extending it where needed it should be
trivial to get started with stylish.
Writing data with attributes
There are two primary mechanisms you can use to output data with attached
attributes; either applying the attributes as part of the format string, or
implementing stylish::Display to be able to print some type with attributes.
Applying attributes in format string
stylish's macros extend the standard fmt parameters to support
setting attributes within (). These must come at the end of the parameters
just before selecting which trait.
assert_eq!;
Allowed attributes
There are two parameterised attributes, and 3 non-parameterised attributes:
-
fgspecifies aForegroundstyle and takes aColorvalue in lowercase -
bgspecifies aBackgroundstyle and also takes aColorvalue in lowercase -
bold,normalandfainttake no parameters and specify anIntensitystyle
Syntax change
The specific syntax change is extending format_spec like so:
format_spec := [[fill]align][sign]['#']['0'][width]['.' precision][attributes]type
attributes := '(' [attribute [',' attribute]* [',']] ')'
attribute := key ['=' value]
key := identifier
value := identifier
Implementing a style for a type
stylish::Display is similar to std::fmt::Display but with a
Formatter that supports setting style attributes. It can be specified by
using the trait-selector s in a format string. See the Formatter docs for
more details on how you can programmatically set the styles as you write out
your data.
;
assert_eq!;
Features
| Feature | Activation | Effect |
|---|---|---|
std |
on-by-default | Enables the io module (and io helpers in other modules) |
alloc |
implied by std |
Enables String and a variety of items that use it |
macros |
on-by-default | Enables macros throughout the other enabled modules |
ansi |
off-by-default | Enables the ansi module and items that use it |
html |
off-by-default | Enables the html module and items that use it |
plain |
off-by-default | Enables the plain module and items that use it |
Rust Version Policy
This crate only supports the current stable version of Rust, patch releases may use new features at any time.
License
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (
LICENSE-APACHEor http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0) - MIT license (
LICENSE-MITor http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.