Colors
A zero-allocation no_std-compatible zero-cost way to add color to your Rust terminal to make people go owo.
Supports:
- All std/core formatters
- Optional checking for if a terminal supports colors
- Enabled for CI
- Disabled by default for non-terminal outputs
- Overridable by
NO_COLOR
/FORCE_COLOR
environment variables - Overridable programmatically via
set_override
- Dependency-less by default
- Hand picked names for all ANSI (4-bit) and Xterm (8-bit) colors
- Support for RGB colors
- Set colors at compile time by generics or at runtime by value
- All ANSI colors
- Basic support (normal and bright variants)
- Xterm support (high compatibility and 256 colors)
- Truecolor support (modern, 48-bit color)
- Styling (underline, strikethrough, etc)
owo-colors is also more-or-less a drop-in replacement for colored, allowing colored to work in a no_std environment. No allocations or dependencies required because embedded systems deserve to be pretty too uwu.
To add to your Cargo.toml:
owo-colors = "3"
Example
use owo_colors::OwoColorize;
fn main() {
// Foreground colors
println!("My number is {:#x}!", 10.green());
// Background colors
println!("My number is not {}!", 4.on_red());
}
Generic colors
use owo_colors::OwoColorize;
use owo_colors::colors::*;
fn main() {
// Generically color
println!("My number might be {}!", 4.fg::<Black>().bg::<Yellow>());
}
Stylize
use owo_colors::OwoColorize;
println!("{}", "strikethrough".strikethrough());
Only Style on Supported Terminals
use owo_colors::{OwoColorize, Stream::Stdout};
println!(
"{}",
"colored blue if a supported terminal"
.if_supports_color(Stdout, |text| text.bright_blue())
);
Supports NO_COLOR
/FORCE_COLOR
environment variables, checks if it's a tty,
checks if it's running in CI (and thus likely supports color), and checks which
terminal is being used. (Note: requires supports-colors
feature)