NAME String::Tagged::Terminal - format terminal output using String::Tagged SYNOPSIS use String::Tagged::Terminal; my $st = String::Tagged::Terminal->new ->append( "Hello my name is " ) ->append_tagged( $name, bold => 1, fgindex => 4 ); $st->say_to_terminal; DESCRIPTION This subclass of String::Tagged provides a method, build_terminal, for outputting the formatting tags embedded in the string as terminal escape sequences, to render the the output in the appropriate style. TAGS The following tag names are recognised: bold, under, italic, strike, blink, reverse These tags take a boolean value. If the value is true then the corresponding terminal rendering attribute is enabled. altfont This tag takes an integer value. If defined it uses the "alternate font selection" sequence. fgindex, bgindex These tags take an integer value in the range 0 to 255. These select the foreground or background colour by using VGA, high-brightness extended 16 colour, or xterm 256 palette mode attributes, depending on the value. The ECMA-48-corrected string encoding form of CSI 38:5:nnn m is used to set the 256 palette values. Values will be rounded down to the nearest integer by calling int(). This convenience allows things like the rand function for generating random colours: $st->append_tagged( "text", fgindex => 1 + rand 6 ); sizepos (experimental) This tag takes a value indicating an adjustment to the vertical positioning, and possibly also size, in order to create subscript or superscript effects. Recognised values are sub for subscript, and super for superscript. These are implemented using the mintty-style CSI 73/74/75 m codes. CONSTRUCTORS new_from_formatting $st = String::Tagged::Terminal->new_from_formatting( $fmt ) Returns a new instance by converting String::Tagged::Formatting standard tags. Foreground and background colours are converted to their nearest index in the xterm 256 colour palette. The monospace Formatting attribute is rendered by selecting the first alternate font using altfont. parse_terminal $st = String::Tagged::Terminal->parse_terminal( $str ); Since version 0.07. Returns a new instance by parsing a string containing SGR terminal escape sequences mixed with plain string content. The parser will only accept 7- or 8-bit encodings of the SGR escape sequence (\e[ ... m or \x9b[ ... m). If any other escape sequences are present, an exception is thrown. Conversely, unrecognised formatting codes in SGR sequences are simply ignored without warning. METHODS The following methods are provided in addition to those provided by String::Tagged. build_terminal $str = $st->build_terminal( %opts ); Returns a string containing terminal escape sequences mixed with string content to render the string to a terminal. As this string will contain literal terminal control escape sequences, care should be taken when passing it around, printing it for debugging purposes, or similar. Takes the following additional named options: no_color If true, the fgindex and bgindex attributes will be ignored. This has the result of performing some formatting using the other attributes, but not setting colours. as_formatting $fmt = $st->as_formatting; Returns a new String::Tagged instance tagged with String::Tagged::Formatting standard tags. print_to_terminal $str->print_to_terminal( $fh ); Since version 0.03. Prints the string to the terminal by building a terminal escape string then printing it to the given IO handle (or STDOUT if not supplied). This method will pass the value of the NO_COLOR environment variable to the underlying "build_terminal" method call, meaning if that has a true value then colouring tags will be ignored, yielding a monochrome output. This follows the suggestion of http://no-color.org/. say_to_terminal $str->say_to_terminal( $fh ); Since version 0.03. Prints the string to the terminal as per "print_to_terminal", followed by a linefeed. COMPATIBILITY NOTES On Windows, the following notes apply: * On all versions of Windows, the attributes bold, fgindex and bgindex are supported. The bold attribute is implemented by using high-intensity colours, so will be indistinguishable from using high-intensity colour indexes without bold. The full 256-color palette is not supported by Windows, so it is down-converted to the 16 colours that are. * Starting with Windows 10, also under and reverse are supported. * The attributes italic, strike, altfont, blink are not supported on any Windows version. * On Windows, only a single output console is supported. AUTHOR Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>