ansi-styles
Last updated
Last updated
ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal
You probably want the higher-level chalk module for styling your strings.
Each style has an open
and close
property.
reset
bold
dim
italic
(Not widely supported)
underline
inverse
hidden
strikethrough
(Not widely supported)
black
red
green
yellow
blue
magenta
cyan
white
gray
("bright black")
redBright
greenBright
yellowBright
blueBright
magentaBright
cyanBright
whiteBright
bgBlack
bgRed
bgGreen
bgYellow
bgBlue
bgMagenta
bgCyan
bgWhite
bgBlackBright
bgRedBright
bgGreenBright
bgYellowBright
bgBlueBright
bgMagentaBright
bgCyanBright
bgWhiteBright
By default, you get a map of styles, but the styles are also available as groups. They are non-enumerable so they don't show up unless you access them explicitly. This makes it easier to expose only a subset in a higher-level module.
style.modifier
style.color
style.bgColor
Example
Raw escape codes (i.e. without the CSI escape prefix \u001B[
and render mode postfix m
) are available under style.codes
, which returns a Map
with the open codes as keys and close codes as values.
Example
ansi-styles
uses the color-convert
package to allow for converting between various colors and ANSI escapes, with support for 256 and 16 million colors.
To use these, call the associated conversion function with the intended output, for example:
ansi-escapes - ANSI escape codes for manipulating the terminal
MIT