In OpenAF, if the current terminal supports ANSI color you can use the ansi* functions in any script. These functions will detected if ANSI color is supported and return the proper escape sequences to produce "color".
Here is a quick description of the 3 main functions:
- ansiStart() - Detects and prepares to output ansi color escape sequences.
- ansiStop() - Stops the output of ansi color escape sequences.
- ansiColor(aAnsiSetting, aString, force) - Returns aString within the appropriate ANSI color escape sequences for the provide aAnsiSetting
The attributes are self-explanatory but some might only work on specific terminals (colors will work pretty much everywhere). You can have a set of attributes separated by commas. You can get a list of possible attributes on the ansiColor help:
> help ansiColor
-- ansiColor(aAnsi, aString, force) : String
-- -----------------------------------------
-- Returns the ANSI codes together with aString, if determined that the current terminal can handle ANSI codes (overridden by force = true), with the attributes defined in aAnsi. Please use with ansiStart() and ansiStop(). The attributes separated by commas can be:
BLACK; RED; GREEN; YELLOW; BLUE; MAGENTA; CYAN; WHITE;
FG_BLACK; FG_RED; FG_GREEN; FG_YELLOW; FG_BLUE; FG_MAGENTA; FG_CYAN; FG_WHITE;
BG_BLACK; BG_RED; BG_GREEN; BG_YELLOW; BG_BLUE; BG_MAGENTA; BG_CYAN; BG_WHITE;
BOLD; FAINT; INTENSITY_BOLD; INTENSITY_FAINT; ITALIC; UNDERLINE; BLINK_SLOW; BLINK_FAST; BLINK_OFF; NEGATIVE_ON; NEGATIVE_OFF; CONCEAL_ON; CONCEAL_OFF; UNDERLINE_DOUBLE; UNDERLINE_OFF;
Examples of usage:
Writing part of a string with white foreground and red background:
Writing part of a string with black foreground and yellow background:
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