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sfcode
An Online Competing and Development Environment
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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.
resetbolddimitalic *(Not widely supported)*underlineinversehiddenstrikethrough *(Not widely supported)*blackredgreenyellowbluemagentacyanwhiteblackBright (alias: gray, grey)redBrightgreenBrightyellowBrightblueBrightmagentaBrightcyanBrightwhiteBrightbgBlackbgRedbgGreenbgYellowbgBluebgMagentabgCyanbgWhitebgBlackBright (alias: bgGray, bgGrey)bgRedBrightbgGreenBrightbgYellowBrightbgBlueBrightbgMagentaBrightbgCyanBrightbgWhiteBrightBy 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.modifierstyle.colorstyle.bgColorRaw 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.
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.
The following color spaces from color-convert are supported:
rgbhexkeywordhslhsvhwbansiansi256To use these, call the associated conversion function with the intended output, for example:
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