.TH COLORIZE 1 "2019-09-01" "colorize v0.65" "User Commands" .SH NAME colorize \- colorize text on terminal with ANSI escape sequences .SH SYNOPSIS \fBcolorize\fR [\fIoption\fR]... (\fIforeground\fR) [\fI-|file\fR] .PP \fBcolorize\fR [\fIoption\fR]... (\fIforeground\fR)/(\fIbackground\fR) [\fI-|file\fR] .PP \fBcolorize\fR \-\-clean[\-all] [\fI-|file\fR] .PP \fBcolorize\fR \-hV .SH DESCRIPTION Colorizes text read from standard input stream or file by using ANSI escape sequences (and also vice versa, i.e. cleaning text from sequences) and prints resulting output to the terminal. .PP When colorizing text, (foreground) and eventually (background) may be either one of following color values: none, black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white, default or random. First character of color name in upper case denotes increased intensity, whereas for lower case colors will be of normal intensity. If "none" is chosen, no escape sequences will be emitted. .PP Color escape sequences are added per each line, hence colored lines can be safely extracted. .PP When de-colorizing text, \-\-clean omits color escape sequences which were emitted by colorize (see NOTES for list), whereas \-\-clean\-all omits all valid ones. If in doubt, consider using \-\-clean\-all. .SH OPTIONS .TP .BR \-\-attr=\fIATTR1,ATTR2,...\fR set attributes by name .RS Attributes: bold, underscore, blink, reverse and concealed. .RE .TP .BR \-\-clean clean text from color escape sequences emitted by colorize .TP .BR \-\-clean\-all clean text from all valid color escape sequences .TP .BR \-c ", " \-\-config=\fIPATH\fR alternate configuration file location .TP .BR \-\-exclude\-random=\fICOLOR\fR text color to be excluded when selecting a random foreground color .TP .BR \-\-omit\-color\-empty omit printing color escape sequences for empty lines .TP .BR \-h ", " \-\-help show help screen and exit .TP .BR \-V ", " \-\-version display version data and exit .SH FILES .TP .B ~/.colorize.conf user configuration file .PP .RS If the aforementioned file exists, it is read, parsed and processed prior to handling the command-line options. Command-line options override configuration values, but are currently not capable of unsetting them. If unsetting is desired, comment them out or remove them. .RE .PP .RS .B Sample configuration file .RS .nf # ~/.colorize.conf attr = bold,underscore color = magenta # favorite one exclude-random = black omit-color-empty = yes .fi .RE .RE .PP .RS .B Configurable options and values .RS .nf attr (values same as command-line option) color (value same as command-line colors) exclude-random (value same as command-line option) omit-color-empty (yes/no) .fi .RE .RE .PP .RS .B Syntax .RS Each line ought to start with a name of an option, followed by = and an optional value. Leaving the value blank, unsets the option. .PP Whitespace is allowed before the option name, after the option name, before the option value and after the option value. .PP Comments may be placed before or after the option is set. Everything following the '#' sign is treated as being commented out. .RE .RE .SH NOTES The list of color escape sequence codes being emitted and omitted is as follows: .IP * 4 30-37,39 (foreground colors) .IP * 4 1-9;30-37,39 (foreground colors with attributes) .IP * 4 40-47,49 (background colors) .IP * 4 0 (reset) .SH EXAMPLES .TP $ \fBcolorize green /etc/motd\fR Print file /etc/motd with green as foreground color .TP $ \fBcolorize green/black /etc/motd\fR Print file /etc/motd with green as foreground and black as background color .TP $ \fBcolorize green /etc/motd | colorize --clean\fR Print input from stdin with color escape sequences omitted .TP $ \fBgit log -1 -p --color | colorize --clean-all\fR Print input from stdin with all color escape sequences omitted .TP $ \fBcolorize --attr=bold green /etc/motd\fR Print file /etc/motd with bold green as foreground color .SH AUTHOR Steven Schubiger