Console API =========== For complete control over terminal formatting, Rich offers a :class:`~rich.console.Console` class. Most applications will require a single Console instance, so you may want to create one at the module level or as an attribute of your top-level object. For example, you could add a file called "console.py" to your project:: from rich.console import Console console = Console() Then you can import the console from anywhere in your project like this:: from my_project.console import console The console object handles the mechanics of generating ANSI escape sequences for color and style. It will auto-detect the capabilities of the terminal and convert colors if necessary. Attributes ---------- The console will auto-detect a number of properties required when rendering. * :obj:`~rich.console.Console.size` is the current dimensions of the terminal (which may change if you resize the window). * :obj:`~rich.console.Console.encoding` is the default encoding (typically "utf-8"). * :obj:`~rich.console.Console.is_terminal` is a boolean that indicates if the Console instance is writing to a terminal or not. * :obj:`~rich.console.Console.color_system` is a string containing the Console color system (see below). Color systems ------------- There are several "standards" for writing color to the terminal which are not all universally supported. Rich will auto-detect the appropriate color system, or you can set it manually by supplying a value for ``color_system`` to the :class:`~rich.console.Console` constructor. You can set ``color_system`` to one of the following values: * ``None`` Disables color entirely. * ``"auto"`` Will auto-detect the color system. * ``"standard"`` Can display 8 colors, with normal and bright variations, for 16 colors in total. * ``"256"`` Can display the 16 colors from "standard" plus a fixed palette of 240 colors. * ``"truecolor"`` Can display 16.7 million colors, which is likely all the colors your monitor can display. * ``"windows"`` Can display 8 colors in legacy Windows terminal. New Windows terminal can display "truecolor". .. warning:: Be careful when setting a color system, if you set a higher color system than your terminal supports, your text may be unreadable. Printing -------- To write rich content to the terminal use the :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` method. Rich will convert any object to a string via its (``__str__``) method and perform some simple syntax highlighting. It will also do pretty printing of any containers, such as dicts and lists. If you print a string it will render :ref:`console_markup`. Here are some examples:: console.print([1, 2, 3]) console.print("[blue underline]Looks like a link") console.print(locals()) console.print("FOO", style="white on blue") You can also use :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` to render objects that support the :ref:`protocol`, which includes Rich's built-in objects such as :class:`~rich.text.Text`, :class:`~rich.table.Table`, and :class:`~rich.syntax.Syntax` -- or other custom objects. Logging ------- The :meth:`~rich.console.Console.log` method offers the same capabilities as print, but adds some features useful for debugging a running application. Logging writes the current time in a column to the left, and the file and line where the method was called to a column on the right. Here's an example:: >>> console.log("Hello, World!") .. raw:: html
[16:32:08] Hello, World! <stdin>:1To help with debugging, the log() method has a ``log_locals`` parameter. If you set this to ``True``, Rich will display a table of local variables where the method was called. Printing JSON ------------- The :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print_json` method will pretty print (format and style) a string containing JSON. Here's a short example:: console.print_json('[false, true, null, "foo"]') You can also *log* json by logging a :class:`~rich.json.JSON` object:: from rich.json import JSON console.log(JSON('["foo", "bar"]')) Because printing JSON is a common requirement, you may import ``print_json`` from the main namespace:: from rich import print_json You can also pretty print JSON via the command line with the following:: python -m rich.json cats.json Low level output ---------------- In additional to :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` and :meth:`~rich.console.Console.log`, Rich has an :meth:`~rich.console.Console.out` method which provides a lower-level way of writing to the terminal. The out() method converts all the positional arguments to strings and won't pretty print, word wrap, or apply markup to the output, but can apply a basic style and will optionally do highlighting. Here's an example:: >>> console.out("Locals", locals()) Rules ----- The :meth:`~rich.console.Console.rule` method will draw a horizontal line with an optional title, which is a good way of dividing your terminal output into sections. >>> console.rule("[bold red]Chapter 2") .. raw:: html
─────────────────────────────── Chapter 2 ───────────────────────────────The rule method also accepts a ``style`` parameter to set the style of the line, and an ``align`` parameter to align the title ("left", "center", or "right"). Status ------ Rich can display a status message with a 'spinner' animation that won't interfere with regular console output. Run the following command for a demo of this feature:: python -m rich.status To display a status message, call :meth:`~rich.console.Console.status` with the status message (which may be a string, Text, or other renderable). The result is a context manager which starts and stops the status display around a block of code. Here's an example:: with console.status("Working..."): do_work() You can change the spinner animation via the ``spinner`` parameter:: with console.status("Monkeying around...", spinner="monkey"): do_work() Run the following command to see the available choices for ``spinner``:: python -m rich.spinner Justify / Alignment ------------------- Both print and log support a ``justify`` argument which if set must be one of "default", "left", "right", "center", or "full". If "left", any text printed (or logged) will be left aligned, if "right" text will be aligned to the right of the terminal, if "center" the text will be centered, and if "full" the text will be lined up with both the left and right edges of the terminal (like printed text in a book). The default for ``justify`` is ``"default"`` which will generally look the same as ``"left"`` but with a subtle difference. Left justify will pad the right of the text with spaces, while a default justify will not. You will only notice the difference if you set a background color with the ``style`` argument. The following example demonstrates the difference:: from rich.console import Console console = Console(width=20) style = "bold white on blue" console.print("Rich", style=style) console.print("Rich", style=style, justify="left") console.print("Rich", style=style, justify="center") console.print("Rich", style=style, justify="right") This produces the following output: .. raw:: html
Rich
Rich
Rich
Rich
Overflow
--------
Overflow is what happens when text you print is larger than the available space. Overflow may occur if you print long 'words' such as URLs for instance, or if you have text inside a panel or table cell with restricted space.
You can specify how Rich should handle overflow with the ``overflow`` argument to :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` which should be one of the following strings: "fold", "crop", "ellipsis", or "ignore". The default is "fold" which will put any excess characters on the following line, creating as many new lines as required to fit the text.
The "crop" method truncates the text at the end of the line, discarding any characters that would overflow.
The "ellipsis" method is similar to "crop", but will insert an ellipsis character ("…") at the end of any text that has been truncated.
The following code demonstrates the basic overflow methods::
from typing import List
from rich.console import Console, OverflowMethod
console = Console(width=14)
supercali = "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious"
overflow_methods: List[OverflowMethod] = ["fold", "crop", "ellipsis"]
for overflow in overflow_methods:
console.rule(overflow)
console.print(supercali, overflow=overflow, style="bold blue")
console.print()
This produces the following output:
.. raw:: html
──── fold ──── supercalifragi listicexpialid ocious ──── crop ──── supercalifragi ── ellipsis ── supercalifrag…You can also set overflow to "ignore" which allows text to run on to the next line. In practice this will look the same as "crop" unless you also set ``crop=False`` when calling :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print`. Console style ------------- The Console has a ``style`` attribute which you can use to apply a style to everything you print. By default ``style`` is None meaning no extra style is applied, but you can set it to any valid style. Here's an example of a Console with a style attribute set:: from rich.console import Console blue_console = Console(style="white on blue") blue_console.print("I'm blue. Da ba dee da ba di.") Soft Wrapping ------------- Rich word wraps text you print by inserting line breaks. You can disable this behavior by setting ``soft_wrap=True`` when calling :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print`. With *soft wrapping* enabled any text that doesn't fit will run on to the following line(s), just like the built-in ``print``. Cropping -------- The :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` method has a boolean ``crop`` argument. The default value for crop is True which tells Rich to crop any content that would otherwise run on to the next line. You generally don't need to think about cropping, as Rich will resize content to fit within the available width. .. note:: Cropping is automatically disabled if you print with ``soft_wrap=True``. Input ----- The console class has an :meth:`~rich.console.Console.input` method which works in the same way as Python's built-in :func:`input` function, but can use anything that Rich can print as a prompt. For example, here's a colorful prompt with an emoji:: from rich.console import Console console = Console() console.input("What is [i]your[/i] [bold red]name[/]? :smiley: ") If Python's builtin :mod:`readline` module is previously loaded, elaborate line editing and history features will be available. Exporting --------- The Console class can export anything written to it as either text, svg, or html. To enable exporting, first set ``record=True`` on the constructor. This tells Rich to save a copy of any data you ``print()`` or ``log()``. Here's an example:: from rich.console import Console console = Console(record=True) After you have written content, you can call :meth:`~rich.console.Console.export_text`, :meth:`~rich.console.Console.export_svg` or :meth:`~rich.console.Console.export_html` to get the console output as a string. You can also call :meth:`~rich.console.Console.save_text`, :meth:`~rich.console.Console.save_svg`, or :meth:`~rich.console.Console.save_html` to write the contents directly to disk. For examples of the html output generated by Rich Console, see :ref:`appendix-colors`. Exporting SVGs ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When using :meth:`~rich.console.Console.export_svg` or :meth:`~rich.console.Console.save_svg`, the width of the SVG will match the width of your terminal window (in terms of characters), while the height will scale automatically to accommodate the console output. You can open the SVG in a web browser. You can also insert it in to a webpage with an ```` tag or by copying the markup in to your HTML. The image below shows an example of an SVG exported by Rich. .. image:: ../images/svg_export.svg You can customize the theme used during SVG export by importing the desired theme from the :mod:`rich.terminal_theme` module and passing it to :meth:`~rich.console.Console.export_svg` or :meth:`~rich.console.Console.save_svg` via the ``theme`` parameter:: from rich.console import Console from rich.terminal_theme import MONOKAI console = Console(record=True) console.save_svg("example.svg", theme=MONOKAI) Alternatively, you can create a theme of your own by constructing a :class:`rich.terminal_theme.TerminalTheme` instance yourself and passing that in. .. note:: The SVGs reference the Fira Code font. If you embed a Rich SVG in your page, you may also want to add a link to the `Fira Code CSS