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// Type definitions for yargs 15.0
// Project: https://github.com/chevex/yargs, https://yargs.js.org
// Definitions by: Martin Poelstra <https://github.com/poelstra>
// Mizunashi Mana <https://github.com/mizunashi-mana>
// Jeffery Grajkowski <https://github.com/pushplay>
// Jimi (Dimitris) Charalampidis <https://github.com/JimiC>
// Steffen Viken Valvåg <https://github.com/steffenvv>
// Emily Marigold Klassen <https://github.com/forivall>
// ExE Boss <https://github.com/ExE-Boss>
// Aankhen <https://github.com/Aankhen>
// Definitions: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped
// TypeScript Version: 3.0
// The following TSLint rules have been disabled:
// unified-signatures: Because there is useful information in the argument names of the overloaded signatures
// Convention:
// Use 'union types' when:
// - parameter types have similar signature type (i.e. 'string | ReadonlyArray<string>')
// - parameter names have the same semantic meaning (i.e. ['command', 'commands'] , ['key', 'keys'])
// An example for not using 'union types' is the declaration of 'env' where `prefix` and `enable` parameters
// have different semantics. On the other hand, in the declaration of 'usage', a `command: string` parameter
// has the same semantic meaning with declaring an overload method by using `commands: ReadonlyArray<string>`,
// thus it's preferred to use `command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>`
// Use parameterless declaration instead of declaring all parameters optional,
// when all parameters are optional and more than one
import { DetailedArguments, Configuration } from 'yargs-parser';
declare namespace yargs {
type BuilderCallback<T, R> = ((args: Argv<T>) => PromiseLike<Argv<R>>) | ((args: Argv<T>) => Argv<R>) | ((args: Argv<T>) => void);
type ParserConfigurationOptions = Configuration & {
/** Sort commands alphabetically. Default is `false` */
'sort-commands': boolean;
};
/**
* The type parameter `T` is the expected shape of the parsed options.
* `Arguments<T>` is those options plus `_` and `$0`, and an indexer falling
* back to `unknown` for unknown options.
*
* For the return type / `argv` property, we create a mapped type over
* `Arguments<T>` to simplify the inferred type signature in client code.
*/
interface Argv<T = {}> {
(): { [key in keyof Arguments<T>]: Arguments<T>[key] };
(args: ReadonlyArray<string>, cwd?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Set key names as equivalent such that updates to a key will propagate to aliases and vice-versa.
*
* Optionally `.alias()` can take an object that maps keys to aliases.
* Each key of this object should be the canonical version of the option, and each value should be a string or an array of strings.
*/
// Aliases for previously declared options can inherit the types of those options.
alias<K1 extends keyof T, K2 extends string>(shortName: K1, longName: K2 | ReadonlyArray<K2>): Argv<T & { [key in K2]: T[K1] }>;
alias<K1 extends keyof T, K2 extends string>(shortName: K2, longName: K1 | ReadonlyArray<K1>): Argv<T & { [key in K2]: T[K1] }>;
alias(shortName: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, longName: string | ReadonlyArray<string>): Argv<T>;
alias(aliases: { [shortName: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> }): Argv<T>;
/**
* Get the arguments as a plain old object.
*
* Arguments without a corresponding flag show up in the `argv._` array.
*
* The script name or node command is available at `argv.$0` similarly to how `$0` works in bash or perl.
*
* If `yargs` is executed in an environment that embeds node and there's no script name (e.g. Electron or nw.js),
* it will ignore the first parameter since it expects it to be the script name. In order to override
* this behavior, use `.parse(process.argv.slice(1))` instead of .argv and the first parameter won't be ignored.
*/
argv: { [key in keyof Arguments<T>]: Arguments<T>[key] };
/**
* Tell the parser to interpret `key` as an array.
* If `.array('foo')` is set, `--foo foo bar` will be parsed as `['foo', 'bar']` rather than as `'foo'`.
* Also, if you use the option multiple times all the values will be flattened in one array so `--foo foo --foo bar` will be parsed as `['foo', 'bar']`
*
* When the option is used with a positional, use `--` to tell `yargs` to stop adding values to the array.
*/
array<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: ToArray<T[key]> }>;
array<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<T & { [key in K]: Array<string | number> | undefined }>;
/**
* Interpret `key` as a boolean. If a non-flag option follows `key` in `process.argv`, that string won't get set as the value of `key`.
*
* `key` will default to `false`, unless a `default(key, undefined)` is explicitly set.
*
* If `key` is an array, interpret all the elements as booleans.
*/
boolean<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: boolean | undefined }>;
boolean<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<T & { [key in K]: boolean | undefined }>;
/**
* Check that certain conditions are met in the provided arguments.
* @param func Called with two arguments, the parsed `argv` hash and an array of options and their aliases.
* If `func` throws or returns a non-truthy value, show the thrown error, usage information, and exit.
* @param global Indicates whether `check()` should be enabled both at the top-level and for each sub-command.
*/
check(func: (argv: Arguments<T>, aliases: { [alias: string]: string }) => any, global?: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Limit valid values for key to a predefined set of choices, given as an array or as an individual value.
* If this method is called multiple times, all enumerated values will be merged together.
* Choices are generally strings or numbers, and value matching is case-sensitive.
*
* Optionally `.choices()` can take an object that maps multiple keys to their choices.
*
* Choices can also be specified as choices in the object given to `option()`.
*/
choices<K extends keyof T, C extends ReadonlyArray<any>>(key: K, values: C): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: C[number] | undefined }>;
choices<K extends string, C extends ReadonlyArray<any>>(key: K, values: C): Argv<T & { [key in K]: C[number] | undefined }>;
choices<C extends { [key: string]: ReadonlyArray<any> }>(choices: C): Argv<Omit<T, keyof C> & { [key in keyof C]: C[key][number] | undefined }>;
/**
* Provide a synchronous function to coerce or transform the value(s) given on the command line for `key`.
*
* The coercion function should accept one argument, representing the parsed value from the command line, and should return a new value or throw an error.
* The returned value will be used as the value for `key` (or one of its aliases) in `argv`.
*
* If the function throws, the error will be treated as a validation failure, delegating to either a custom `.fail()` handler or printing the error message in the console.
*
* Coercion will be applied to a value after all other modifications, such as `.normalize()`.
*
* Optionally `.coerce()` can take an object that maps several keys to their respective coercion function.
*
* You can also map the same function to several keys at one time. Just pass an array of keys as the first argument to `.coerce()`.
*
* If you are using dot-notion or arrays, .e.g., `user.email` and `user.password`, coercion will be applied to the final object that has been parsed
*/
coerce<K extends keyof T, V>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, func: (arg: any) => V): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: V | undefined }>;
coerce<K extends string, V>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, func: (arg: any) => V): Argv<T & { [key in K]: V | undefined }>;
coerce<O extends { [key: string]: (arg: any) => any }>(opts: O): Argv<Omit<T, keyof O> & { [key in keyof O]: ReturnType<O[key]> | undefined }>;
/**
* Define the commands exposed by your application.
* @param command Should be a string representing the command or an array of strings representing the command and its aliases.
* @param description Use to provide a description for each command your application accepts (the values stored in `argv._`).
* Set `description` to false to create a hidden command. Hidden commands don't show up in the help output and aren't available for completion.
* @param [builder] Object to give hints about the options that your command accepts.
* Can also be a function. This function is executed with a yargs instance, and can be used to provide advanced command specific help.
*
* Note that when `void` is returned, the handler `argv` object type will not include command-specific arguments.
* @param [handler] Function, which will be executed with the parsed `argv` object.
*/
command<U = T>(
command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>,
description: string,
builder?: BuilderCallback<T, U>,
handler?: (args: Arguments<U>) => void,
middlewares?: MiddlewareFunction[],
deprecated?: boolean | string,
): Argv<U>;
command<O extends { [key: string]: Options }>(
command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>,
description: string,
builder?: O,
handler?: (args: Arguments<InferredOptionTypes<O>>) => void,
middlewares?: MiddlewareFunction[],
deprecated?: boolean | string,
): Argv<T>;
command<U>(command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, description: string, module: CommandModule<T, U>): Argv<U>;
command<U = T>(
command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>,
showInHelp: false,
builder?: BuilderCallback<T, U>,
handler?: (args: Arguments<U>) => void,
middlewares?: MiddlewareFunction[],
deprecated?: boolean | string,
): Argv<T>;
command<O extends { [key: string]: Options }>(
command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>,
showInHelp: false,
builder?: O,
handler?: (args: Arguments<InferredOptionTypes<O>>) => void,
): Argv<T>;
command<U>(command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, showInHelp: false, module: CommandModule<T, U>): Argv<U>;
command<U>(module: CommandModule<T, U>): Argv<U>;
// Advanced API
/** Apply command modules from a directory relative to the module calling this method. */
commandDir(dir: string, opts?: RequireDirectoryOptions): Argv<T>;
/**
* Enable bash/zsh-completion shortcuts for commands and options.
*
* If invoked without parameters, `.completion()` will make completion the command to output the completion script.
*
* @param [cmd] When present in `argv._`, will result in the `.bashrc` or `.zshrc` completion script being outputted.
* To enable bash/zsh completions, concat the generated script to your `.bashrc` or `.bash_profile` (or `.zshrc` for zsh).
* @param [description] Provide a description in your usage instructions for the command that generates the completion scripts.
* @param [func] Rather than relying on yargs' default completion functionality, which shiver me timbers is pretty awesome, you can provide your own completion method.
*/
completion(): Argv<T>;
completion(cmd: string, func?: AsyncCompletionFunction): Argv<T>;
completion(cmd: string, func?: SyncCompletionFunction): Argv<T>;
completion(cmd: string, func?: PromiseCompletionFunction): Argv<T>;
completion(cmd: string, description?: string | false, func?: AsyncCompletionFunction): Argv<T>;
completion(cmd: string, description?: string | false, func?: SyncCompletionFunction): Argv<T>;
completion(cmd: string, description?: string | false, func?: PromiseCompletionFunction): Argv<T>;
/**
* Tells the parser that if the option specified by `key` is passed in, it should be interpreted as a path to a JSON config file.
* The file is loaded and parsed, and its properties are set as arguments.
* Because the file is loaded using Node's require(), the filename MUST end in `.json` to be interpreted correctly.
*
* If invoked without parameters, `.config()` will make --config the option to pass the JSON config file.
*
* @param [description] Provided to customize the config (`key`) option in the usage string.
* @param [explicitConfigurationObject] An explicit configuration `object`
*/
config(): Argv<T>;
config(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, description?: string, parseFn?: (configPath: string) => object): Argv<T>;
config(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, parseFn: (configPath: string) => object): Argv<T>;
config(explicitConfigurationObject: object): Argv<T>;
/**
* Given the key `x` is set, the key `y` must not be set. `y` can either be a single string or an array of argument names that `x` conflicts with.
*
* Optionally `.conflicts()` can accept an object specifying multiple conflicting keys.
*/
conflicts(key: string, value: string | ReadonlyArray<string>): Argv<T>;
conflicts(conflicts: { [key: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> }): Argv<T>;
/**
* Interpret `key` as a boolean flag, but set its parsed value to the number of flag occurrences rather than `true` or `false`. Default value is thus `0`.
*/
count<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: number }>;
count<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<T & { [key in K]: number }>;
/**
* Set `argv[key]` to `value` if no option was specified in `process.argv`.
*
* Optionally `.default()` can take an object that maps keys to default values.
*
* The default value can be a `function` which returns a value. The name of the function will be used in the usage string.
*
* Optionally, `description` can also be provided and will take precedence over displaying the value in the usage instructions.
*/
default<K extends keyof T, V>(key: K, value: V, description?: string): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: V }>;
default<K extends string, V>(key: K, value: V, description?: string): Argv<T & { [key in K]: V }>;
default<D extends { [key: string]: any }>(defaults: D, description?: string): Argv<Omit<T, keyof D> & D>;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use '.demandCommand()' or '.demandOption()' instead
*/
demand<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, msg?: string | true): Argv<Defined<T, K>>;
demand<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, msg?: string | true): Argv<T & { [key in K]: unknown }>;
demand(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, required?: boolean): Argv<T>;
demand(positionals: number, msg: string): Argv<T>;
demand(positionals: number, required?: boolean): Argv<T>;
demand(positionals: number, max: number, msg?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* @param key If is a string, show the usage information and exit if key wasn't specified in `process.argv`.
* If is an array, demand each element.
* @param msg If string is given, it will be printed when the argument is missing, instead of the standard error message.
* @param demand Controls whether the option is demanded; this is useful when using .options() to specify command line parameters.
*/
demandOption<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, msg?: string | true): Argv<Defined<T, K>>;
demandOption<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, msg?: string | true): Argv<T & { [key in K]: unknown }>;
demandOption(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, demand?: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Demand in context of commands.
* You can demand a minimum and a maximum number a user can have within your program, as well as provide corresponding error messages if either of the demands is not met.
*/
demandCommand(): Argv<T>;
demandCommand(min: number, minMsg?: string): Argv<T>;
demandCommand(min: number, max?: number, minMsg?: string, maxMsg?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Shows a [deprecated] notice in front of the option
*/
deprecateOption(option: string, msg?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Describe a `key` for the generated usage information.
*
* Optionally `.describe()` can take an object that maps keys to descriptions.
*/
describe(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, description: string): Argv<T>;
describe(descriptions: { [key: string]: string }): Argv<T>;
/** Should yargs attempt to detect the os' locale? Defaults to `true`. */
detectLocale(detect: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Tell yargs to parse environment variables matching the given prefix and apply them to argv as though they were command line arguments.
*
* Use the "__" separator in the environment variable to indicate nested options. (e.g. prefix_nested__foo => nested.foo)
*
* If this method is called with no argument or with an empty string or with true, then all env vars will be applied to argv.
*
* Program arguments are defined in this order of precedence:
* 1. Command line args
* 2. Env vars
* 3. Config file/objects
* 4. Configured defaults
*
* Env var parsing is disabled by default, but you can also explicitly disable it by calling `.env(false)`, e.g. if you need to undo previous configuration.
*/
env(): Argv<T>;
env(prefix: string): Argv<T>;
env(enable: boolean): Argv<T>;
/** A message to print at the end of the usage instructions */
epilog(msg: string): Argv<T>;
/** A message to print at the end of the usage instructions */
epilogue(msg: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Give some example invocations of your program.
* Inside `cmd`, the string `$0` will get interpolated to the current script name or node command for the present script similar to how `$0` works in bash or perl.
* Examples will be printed out as part of the help message.
*/
example(command: string, description: string): Argv<T>;
example(command: ReadonlyArray<[string, string?]>): Argv<T>;
/** Manually indicate that the program should exit, and provide context about why we wanted to exit. Follows the behavior set by `.exitProcess().` */
exit(code: number, err: Error): void;
/**
* By default, yargs exits the process when the user passes a help flag, the user uses the `.version` functionality, validation fails, or the command handler fails.
* Calling `.exitProcess(false)` disables this behavior, enabling further actions after yargs have been validated.
*/
exitProcess(enabled: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Method to execute when a failure occurs, rather than printing the failure message.
* @param func Is called with the failure message that would have been printed, the Error instance originally thrown and yargs state when the failure occurred.
*/
fail(func: (msg: string, err: Error, yargs: Argv<T>) => any): Argv<T>;
/**
* Allows to programmatically get completion choices for any line.
* @param args An array of the words in the command line to complete.
* @param done The callback to be called with the resulting completions.
*/
getCompletion(args: ReadonlyArray<string>, done: (completions: ReadonlyArray<string>) => void): Argv<T>;
/**
* Indicate that an option (or group of options) should not be reset when a command is executed
*
* Options default to being global.
*/
global(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>): Argv<T>;
/** Given a key, or an array of keys, places options under an alternative heading when displaying usage instructions */
group(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, groupName: string): Argv<T>;
/** Hides a key from the generated usage information. Unless a `--show-hidden` option is also passed with `--help` (see `showHidden()`). */
hide(key: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Configure an (e.g. `--help`) and implicit command that displays the usage string and exits the process.
* By default yargs enables help on the `--help` option.
*
* Note that any multi-char aliases (e.g. `help`) used for the help option will also be used for the implicit command.
* If there are no multi-char aliases (e.g. `h`), then all single-char aliases will be used for the command.
*
* If invoked without parameters, `.help()` will use `--help` as the option and help as the implicit command to trigger help output.
*
* @param [description] Customizes the description of the help option in the usage string.
* @param [enableExplicit] If `false` is provided, it will disable --help.
*/
help(): Argv<T>;
help(enableExplicit: boolean): Argv<T>;
help(option: string, enableExplicit: boolean): Argv<T>;
help(option: string, description?: string, enableExplicit?: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Given the key `x` is set, it is required that the key `y` is set.
* y` can either be the name of an argument to imply, a number indicating the position of an argument or an array of multiple implications to associate with `x`.
*
* Optionally `.implies()` can accept an object specifying multiple implications.
*/
implies(key: string, value: string | ReadonlyArray<string>): Argv<T>;
implies(implies: { [key: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> }): Argv<T>;
/**
* Return the locale that yargs is currently using.
*
* By default, yargs will auto-detect the operating system's locale so that yargs-generated help content will display in the user's language.
*/
locale(): string;
/**
* Override the auto-detected locale from the user's operating system with a static locale.
* Note that the OS locale can be modified by setting/exporting the `LC_ALL` environment variable.
*/
locale(loc: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Define global middleware functions to be called first, in list order, for all cli command.
* @param callbacks Can be a function or a list of functions. Each callback gets passed a reference to argv.
* @param [applyBeforeValidation] Set to `true` to apply middleware before validation. This will execute the middleware prior to validation checks, but after parsing.
*/
middleware(callbacks: MiddlewareFunction<T> | ReadonlyArray<MiddlewareFunction<T>>, applyBeforeValidation?: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* The number of arguments that should be consumed after a key. This can be a useful hint to prevent parsing ambiguity.
*
* Optionally `.nargs()` can take an object of `key`/`narg` pairs.
*/
nargs(key: string, count: number): Argv<T>;
nargs(nargs: { [key: string]: number }): Argv<T>;
/** The key provided represents a path and should have `path.normalize()` applied. */
normalize<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: ToString<T[key]> }>;
normalize<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<T & { [key in K]: string | undefined }>;
/**
* Tell the parser to always interpret key as a number.
*
* If `key` is an array, all elements will be parsed as numbers.
*
* If the option is given on the command line without a value, `argv` will be populated with `undefined`.
*
* If the value given on the command line cannot be parsed as a number, `argv` will be populated with `NaN`.
*
* Note that decimals, hexadecimals, and scientific notation are all accepted.
*/
number<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: ToNumber<T[key]> }>;
number<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<T & { [key in K]: number | undefined }>;
/**
* Method to execute when a command finishes successfully.
* @param func Is called with the successful result of the command that finished.
*/
onFinishCommand(func: (result: any) => void): Argv<T>;
/**
* This method can be used to make yargs aware of options that could exist.
* You can also pass an opt object which can hold further customization, like `.alias()`, `.demandOption()` etc. for that option.
*/
option<K extends keyof T, O extends Options>(key: K, options: O): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: InferredOptionType<O> }>;
option<K extends string, O extends Options>(key: K, options: O): Argv<T & { [key in K]: InferredOptionType<O> }>;
option<O extends { [key: string]: Options }>(options: O): Argv<Omit<T, keyof O> & InferredOptionTypes<O>>;
/**
* This method can be used to make yargs aware of options that could exist.
* You can also pass an opt object which can hold further customization, like `.alias()`, `.demandOption()` etc. for that option.
*/
options<K extends keyof T, O extends Options>(key: K, options: O): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: InferredOptionType<O> }>;
options<K extends string, O extends Options>(key: K, options: O): Argv<T & { [key in K]: InferredOptionType<O> }>;
options<O extends { [key: string]: Options }>(options: O): Argv<Omit<T, keyof O> & InferredOptionTypes<O>>;
/**
* Parse `args` instead of `process.argv`. Returns the `argv` object. `args` may either be a pre-processed argv array, or a raw argument string.
*
* Note: Providing a callback to parse() disables the `exitProcess` setting until after the callback is invoked.
* @param [context] Provides a useful mechanism for passing state information to commands
*/
parse(): { [key in keyof Arguments<T>]: Arguments<T>[key] };
parse(arg: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, context?: object, parseCallback?: ParseCallback<T>): { [key in keyof Arguments<T>]: Arguments<T>[key] };
/**
* If the arguments have not been parsed, this property is `false`.
*
* If the arguments have been parsed, this contain detailed parsed arguments.
*/
parsed: DetailedArguments | false;
/** Allows to configure advanced yargs features. */
parserConfiguration(configuration: Partial<ParserConfigurationOptions>): Argv<T>;
/**
* Similar to `config()`, indicates that yargs should interpret the object from the specified key in package.json as a configuration object.
* @param [cwd] If provided, the package.json will be read from this location
*/
pkgConf(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, cwd?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Allows you to configure a command's positional arguments with an API similar to `.option()`.
* `.positional()` should be called in a command's builder function, and is not available on the top-level yargs instance. If so, it will throw an error.
*/
positional<K extends keyof T, O extends PositionalOptions>(key: K, opt: O): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: InferredOptionType<O> }>;
positional<K extends string, O extends PositionalOptions>(key: K, opt: O): Argv<T & { [key in K]: InferredOptionType<O> }>;
/** Should yargs provide suggestions regarding similar commands if no matching command is found? */
recommendCommands(): Argv<T>;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use '.demandCommand()' or '.demandOption()' instead
*/
require<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, msg?: string | true): Argv<Defined<T, K>>;
require(key: string, msg: string): Argv<T>;
require(key: string, required: boolean): Argv<T>;
require(keys: ReadonlyArray<number>, msg: string): Argv<T>;
require(keys: ReadonlyArray<number>, required: boolean): Argv<T>;
require(positionals: number, required: boolean): Argv<T>;
require(positionals: number, msg: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use '.demandCommand()' or '.demandOption()' instead
*/
required<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>, msg?: string | true): Argv<Defined<T, K>>;
required(key: string, msg: string): Argv<T>;
required(key: string, required: boolean): Argv<T>;
required(keys: ReadonlyArray<number>, msg: string): Argv<T>;
required(keys: ReadonlyArray<number>, required: boolean): Argv<T>;
required(positionals: number, required: boolean): Argv<T>;
required(positionals: number, msg: string): Argv<T>;
requiresArg(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>): Argv<T>;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use '.global()' instead
*/
reset(): Argv<T>;
/** Set the name of your script ($0). Default is the base filename executed by node (`process.argv[1]`) */
scriptName($0: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Generate a bash completion script.
* Users of your application can install this script in their `.bashrc`, and yargs will provide completion shortcuts for commands and options.
*/
showCompletionScript(): Argv<T>;
/**
* Configure the `--show-hidden` option that displays the hidden keys (see `hide()`).
* @param option If `boolean`, it enables/disables this option altogether. i.e. hidden keys will be permanently hidden if first argument is `false`.
* If `string` it changes the key name ("--show-hidden").
* @param description Changes the default description ("Show hidden options")
*/
showHidden(option?: string | boolean): Argv<T>;
showHidden(option: string, description?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Print the usage data using the console function consoleLevel for printing.
* @param [consoleLevel='error']
*/
showHelp(consoleLevel?: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Provide the usage data as a string.
* @param printCallback a function with a single argument.
*/
showHelp(printCallback: (s: string) => void): Argv<T>;
/**
* By default, yargs outputs a usage string if any error is detected.
* Use the `.showHelpOnFail()` method to customize this behavior.
* @param enable If `false`, the usage string is not output.
* @param [message] Message that is output after the error message.
*/
showHelpOnFail(enable: boolean, message?: string): Argv<T>;
/** Specifies either a single option key (string), or an array of options. If any of the options is present, yargs validation is skipped. */
skipValidation(key: string | ReadonlyArray<string>): Argv<T>;
/**
* Any command-line argument given that is not demanded, or does not have a corresponding description, will be reported as an error.
*
* Unrecognized commands will also be reported as errors.
*/
strict(): Argv<T>;
strict(enabled: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Similar to .strict(), except that it only applies to unrecognized commands.
* A user can still provide arbitrary options, but unknown positional commands
* will raise an error.
*/
strictCommands(): Argv<T>;
strictCommands(enabled: boolean): Argv<T>;
/**
* Tell the parser logic not to interpret `key` as a number or boolean. This can be useful if you need to preserve leading zeros in an input.
*
* If `key` is an array, interpret all the elements as strings.
*
* `.string('_')` will result in non-hyphenated arguments being interpreted as strings, regardless of whether they resemble numbers.
*/
string<K extends keyof T>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: ToString<T[key]> }>;
string<K extends string>(key: K | ReadonlyArray<K>): Argv<T & { [key in K]: string | undefined }>;
// Intended to be used with '.wrap()'
terminalWidth(): number;
updateLocale(obj: { [key: string]: string }): Argv<T>;
/**
* Override the default strings used by yargs with the key/value pairs provided in obj
*
* If you explicitly specify a locale(), you should do so before calling `updateStrings()`.
*/
updateStrings(obj: { [key: string]: string }): Argv<T>;
/**
* Set a usage message to show which commands to use.
* Inside `message`, the string `$0` will get interpolated to the current script name or node command for the present script similar to how `$0` works in bash or perl.
*
* If the optional `description`/`builder`/`handler` are provided, `.usage()` acts an an alias for `.command()`.
* This allows you to use `.usage()` to configure the default command that will be run as an entry-point to your application
* and allows you to provide configuration for the positional arguments accepted by your program:
*/
usage(message: string): Argv<T>;
usage<U>(command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, description: string, builder?: (args: Argv<T>) => Argv<U>, handler?: (args: Arguments<U>) => void): Argv<T>;
usage<U>(command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, showInHelp: boolean, builder?: (args: Argv<T>) => Argv<U>, handler?: (args: Arguments<U>) => void): Argv<T>;
usage<O extends { [key: string]: Options }>(command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, description: string, builder?: O, handler?: (args: Arguments<InferredOptionTypes<O>>) => void): Argv<T>;
usage<O extends { [key: string]: Options }>(command: string | ReadonlyArray<string>, showInHelp: boolean, builder?: O, handler?: (args: Arguments<InferredOptionTypes<O>>) => void): Argv<T>;
/**
* Add an option (e.g. `--version`) that displays the version number (given by the version parameter) and exits the process.
* By default yargs enables version for the `--version` option.
*
* If no arguments are passed to version (`.version()`), yargs will parse the package.json of your module and use its version value.
*
* If the boolean argument `false` is provided, it will disable `--version`.
*/
version(): Argv<T>;
version(version: string): Argv<T>;
version(enable: boolean): Argv<T>;
version(optionKey: string, version: string): Argv<T>;
version(optionKey: string, description: string, version: string): Argv<T>;
/**
* Format usage output to wrap at columns many columns.
*
* By default wrap will be set to `Math.min(80, windowWidth)`. Use `.wrap(null)` to specify no column limit (no right-align).
* Use `.wrap(yargs.terminalWidth())` to maximize the width of yargs' usage instructions.
*/
wrap(columns: number | null): Argv<T>;
}
type Arguments<T = {}> = T & {
/** Non-option arguments */
_: Array<string | number>;
/** The script name or node command */
$0: string;
/** All remaining options */
[argName: string]: unknown;
};
interface RequireDirectoryOptions {
/** Look for command modules in all subdirectories and apply them as a flattened (non-hierarchical) list. */
recurse?: boolean;
/** The types of files to look for when requiring command modules. */
extensions?: ReadonlyArray<string>;
/**
* A synchronous function called for each command module encountered.
* Accepts `commandObject`, `pathToFile`, and `filename` as arguments.
* Returns `commandObject` to include the command; any falsy value to exclude/skip it.
*/
visit?: (commandObject: any, pathToFile?: string, filename?: string) => any;
/** Whitelist certain modules */
include?: RegExp | ((pathToFile: string) => boolean);
/** Blacklist certain modules. */
exclude?: RegExp | ((pathToFile: string) => boolean);
}
interface Options {
/** string or array of strings, alias(es) for the canonical option key, see `alias()` */
alias?: string | ReadonlyArray<string>;
/** boolean, interpret option as an array, see `array()` */
array?: boolean;
/** boolean, interpret option as a boolean flag, see `boolean()` */
boolean?: boolean;
/** value or array of values, limit valid option arguments to a predefined set, see `choices()` */
choices?: Choices;
/** function, coerce or transform parsed command line values into another value, see `coerce()` */
coerce?: (arg: any) => any;
/** boolean, interpret option as a path to a JSON config file, see `config()` */
config?: boolean;
/** function, provide a custom config parsing function, see `config()` */
configParser?: (configPath: string) => object;
/** string or object, require certain keys not to be set, see `conflicts()` */
conflicts?: string | ReadonlyArray<string> | { [key: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> };
/** boolean, interpret option as a count of boolean flags, see `count()` */
count?: boolean;
/** value, set a default value for the option, see `default()` */
default?: any;
/** string, use this description for the default value in help content, see `default()` */
defaultDescription?: string;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use 'demandOption' instead
*/
demand?: boolean | string;
/** boolean or string, mark the argument as deprecated, see `deprecateOption()` */
deprecate?: boolean | string;
/** boolean or string, mark the argument as deprecated, see `deprecateOption()` */
deprecated?: boolean | string;
/** boolean or string, demand the option be given, with optional error message, see `demandOption()` */
demandOption?: boolean | string;
/** string, the option description for help content, see `describe()` */
desc?: string;
/** string, the option description for help content, see `describe()` */
describe?: string;
/** string, the option description for help content, see `describe()` */
description?: string;
/** boolean, indicate that this key should not be reset when a command is invoked, see `global()` */
global?: boolean;
/** string, when displaying usage instructions place the option under an alternative group heading, see `group()` */
group?: string;
/** don't display option in help output. */
hidden?: boolean;
/** string or object, require certain keys to be set, see `implies()` */
implies?: string | ReadonlyArray<string> | { [key: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> };
/** number, specify how many arguments should be consumed for the option, see `nargs()` */
nargs?: number;
/** boolean, apply path.normalize() to the option, see `normalize()` */
normalize?: boolean;
/** boolean, interpret option as a number, `number()` */
number?: boolean;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use 'demandOption' instead
*/
require?: boolean | string;
/**
* @deprecated since version 6.6.0
* Use 'demandOption' instead
*/
required?: boolean | string;
/** boolean, require the option be specified with a value, see `requiresArg()` */
requiresArg?: boolean;
/** boolean, skips validation if the option is present, see `skipValidation()` */
skipValidation?: boolean;
/** boolean, interpret option as a string, see `string()` */
string?: boolean;
type?: "array" | "count" | PositionalOptionsType;
}
interface PositionalOptions {
/** string or array of strings, see `alias()` */
alias?: string | ReadonlyArray<string>;
/** boolean, interpret option as an array, see `array()` */
array?: boolean;
/** value or array of values, limit valid option arguments to a predefined set, see `choices()` */
choices?: Choices;
/** function, coerce or transform parsed command line values into another value, see `coerce()` */
coerce?: (arg: any) => any;
/** string or object, require certain keys not to be set, see `conflicts()` */
conflicts?: string | ReadonlyArray<string> | { [key: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> };
/** value, set a default value for the option, see `default()` */
default?: any;
/** boolean or string, demand the option be given, with optional error message, see `demandOption()` */
demandOption?: boolean | string;
/** string, the option description for help content, see `describe()` */
desc?: string;
/** string, the option description for help content, see `describe()` */
describe?: string;
/** string, the option description for help content, see `describe()` */
description?: string;
/** string or object, require certain keys to be set, see `implies()` */
implies?: string | ReadonlyArray<string> | { [key: string]: string | ReadonlyArray<string> };
/** boolean, apply path.normalize() to the option, see normalize() */
normalize?: boolean;
type?: PositionalOptionsType;
}
/** Remove keys K in T */
type Omit<T, K> = { [key in Exclude<keyof T, K>]: T[key] };
/** Remove undefined as a possible value for keys K in T */
type Defined<T, K extends keyof T> = Omit<T, K> & { [key in K]: Exclude<T[key], undefined> };
/** Convert T to T[] and T | undefined to T[] | undefined */
type ToArray<T> = Array<Exclude<T, undefined>> | Extract<T, undefined>;
/** Gives string[] if T is an array type, otherwise string. Preserves | undefined. */
type ToString<T> = (Exclude<T, undefined> extends any[] ? string[] : string) | Extract<T, undefined>;
/** Gives number[] if T is an array type, otherwise number. Preserves | undefined. */
type ToNumber<T> = (Exclude<T, undefined> extends any[] ? number[] : number) | Extract<T, undefined>;
type InferredOptionType<O extends Options | PositionalOptions> =
O extends { default: any, coerce: (arg: any) => infer T } ? T :
O extends { default: infer D } ? D :
O extends { type: "count" } ? number :
O extends { count: true } ? number :
O extends { required: string | true } ? RequiredOptionType<O> :
O extends { require: string | true } ? RequiredOptionType<O> :
O extends { demand: string | true } ? RequiredOptionType<O> :
O extends { demandOption: string | true } ? RequiredOptionType<O> :
RequiredOptionType<O> | undefined;
type RequiredOptionType<O extends Options | PositionalOptions> =
O extends { type: "array", string: true } ? string[] :
O extends { type: "array", number: true } ? number[] :
O extends { type: "array", normalize: true } ? string[] :
O extends { type: "string", array: true } ? string[] :
O extends { type: "number", array: true } ? number[] :
O extends { string: true, array: true } ? string[] :
O extends { number: true, array: true } ? number[] :
O extends { normalize: true, array: true } ? string[] :
O extends { type: "array" } ? Array<string | number> :
O extends { type: "boolean" } ? boolean :
O extends { type: "number" } ? number :
O extends { type: "string" } ? string :
O extends { array: true } ? Array<string | number> :
O extends { boolean: true } ? boolean :
O extends { number: true } ? number :
O extends { string: true } ? string :
O extends { normalize: true } ? string :
O extends { choices: ReadonlyArray<infer C> } ? C :
O extends { coerce: (arg: any) => infer T } ? T :
unknown;
type InferredOptionTypes<O extends { [key: string]: Options }> = { [key in keyof O]: InferredOptionType<O[key]> };
interface CommandModule<T = {}, U = {}> {
/** array of strings (or a single string) representing aliases of `exports.command`, positional args defined in an alias are ignored */
aliases?: ReadonlyArray<string> | string;
/** object declaring the options the command accepts, or a function accepting and returning a yargs instance */
builder?: CommandBuilder<T, U>;
/** string (or array of strings) that executes this command when given on the command line, first string may contain positional args */
command?: ReadonlyArray<string> | string;
/** boolean (or string) to show deprecation notice */
deprecated?: boolean | string;
/** string used as the description for the command in help text, use `false` for a hidden command */
describe?: string | false;
/** a function which will be passed the parsed argv. */
handler: (args: Arguments<U>) => void;
}
type ParseCallback<T = {}> = (err: Error | undefined, argv: Arguments<T>, output: string) => void;
type CommandBuilder<T = {}, U = {}> = { [key: string]: Options } | ((args: Argv<T>) => Argv<U>) | ((args: Argv<T>) => PromiseLike<Argv<U>>);
type SyncCompletionFunction = (current: string, argv: any) => string[];
type AsyncCompletionFunction = (current: string, argv: any, done: (completion: ReadonlyArray<string>) => void) => void;
type PromiseCompletionFunction = (current: string, argv: any) => Promise<string[]>;
type MiddlewareFunction<T = {}> = (args: Arguments<T>) => void;
type Choices = ReadonlyArray<string | number | true | undefined>;
type PositionalOptionsType = "boolean" | "number" | "string";
}
declare var yargs: yargs.Argv;
export = yargs;
{
"name": "@types/yargs",
"version": "15.0.13",
"description": "TypeScript definitions for yargs",
"license": "MIT",
"contributors": [
{
"name": "Martin Poelstra",
"url": "https://github.com/poelstra",
"githubUsername": "poelstra"
},
{
"name": "Mizunashi Mana",
"url": "https://github.com/mizunashi-mana",
"githubUsername": "mizunashi-mana"
},
{
"name": "Jeffery Grajkowski",
"url": "https://github.com/pushplay",
"githubUsername": "pushplay"
},
{
"name": "Jimi (Dimitris) Charalampidis",
"url": "https://github.com/JimiC",
"githubUsername": "JimiC"
},
{
"name": "Steffen Viken Valvåg",
"url": "https://github.com/steffenvv",
"githubUsername": "steffenvv"
},
{
"name": "Emily Marigold Klassen",
"url": "https://github.com/forivall",
"githubUsername": "forivall"
},
{
"name": "ExE Boss",
"url": "https://github.com/ExE-Boss",
"githubUsername": "ExE-Boss"
},
{
"name": "Aankhen",
"url": "https://github.com/Aankhen",
"githubUsername": "Aankhen"
}
],
"main": "",
"types": "index.d.ts",
"repository": {
"type": "git",
"url": "https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped.git",
"directory": "types/yargs"
},
"scripts": {},
"dependencies": {
"@types/yargs-parser": "*"
},
"typesPublisherContentHash": "9dc5dfe6f64e907144ccb7cbdc31a59a4f0d5408c4fe0c0b1975f64ac7d3b312",
"typeScriptVersion": "3.4"
}
\ No newline at end of file
import { Argv } from '.';
export = Yargs;
declare function Yargs(
processArgs?: ReadonlyArray<string>,
cwd?: string,
parentRequire?: NodeRequire,
): Argv;
declare namespace ansiRegex {
interface Options {
/**
Match only the first ANSI escape.
@default false
*/
onlyFirst: boolean;
}
}
/**
Regular expression for matching ANSI escape codes.
@example
```
import ansiRegex = require('ansi-regex');
ansiRegex().test('\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m');
//=> true
ansiRegex().test('cake');
//=> false
'\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m'.match(ansiRegex());
//=> ['\u001B[4m', '\u001B[0m']
'\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m'.match(ansiRegex({onlyFirst: true}));
//=> ['\u001B[4m']
'\u001B]8;;https://github.com\u0007click\u001B]8;;\u0007'.match(ansiRegex());
//=> ['\u001B]8;;https://github.com\u0007', '\u001B]8;;\u0007']
```
*/
declare function ansiRegex(options?: ansiRegex.Options): RegExp;
export = ansiRegex;
'use strict';
module.exports = ({onlyFirst = false} = {}) => {
const pattern = [
'[\\u001B\\u009B][[\\]()#;?]*(?:(?:(?:[a-zA-Z\\d]*(?:;[-a-zA-Z\\d\\/#&.:=?%@~_]*)*)?\\u0007)',
'(?:(?:\\d{1,4}(?:;\\d{0,4})*)?[\\dA-PR-TZcf-ntqry=><~]))'
].join('|');
return new RegExp(pattern, onlyFirst ? undefined : 'g');
};
MIT License
Copyright (c) Sindre Sorhus <sindresorhus@gmail.com> (sindresorhus.com)
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
{
"name": "ansi-regex",
"version": "5.0.0",
"description": "Regular expression for matching ANSI escape codes",
"license": "MIT",
"repository": "chalk/ansi-regex",
"author": {
"name": "Sindre Sorhus",
"email": "sindresorhus@gmail.com",
"url": "sindresorhus.com"
},
"engines": {
"node": ">=8"
},
"scripts": {
"test": "xo && ava && tsd",
"view-supported": "node fixtures/view-codes.js"
},
"files": [
"index.js",
"index.d.ts"
],
"keywords": [
"ansi",
"styles",
"color",
"colour",
"colors",
"terminal",
"console",
"cli",
"string",
"tty",
"escape",
"formatting",
"rgb",
"256",
"shell",
"xterm",
"command-line",
"text",
"regex",
"regexp",
"re",
"match",
"test",
"find",
"pattern"
],
"devDependencies": {
"ava": "^2.4.0",
"tsd": "^0.9.0",
"xo": "^0.25.3"
}
}
# ansi-regex [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/chalk/ansi-regex.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/chalk/ansi-regex)
> Regular expression for matching [ANSI escape codes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code)
## Install
```
$ npm install ansi-regex
```
## Usage
```js
const ansiRegex = require('ansi-regex');
ansiRegex().test('\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m');
//=> true
ansiRegex().test('cake');
//=> false
'\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m'.match(ansiRegex());
//=> ['\u001B[4m', '\u001B[0m']
'\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m'.match(ansiRegex({onlyFirst: true}));
//=> ['\u001B[4m']
'\u001B]8;;https://github.com\u0007click\u001B]8;;\u0007'.match(ansiRegex());
//=> ['\u001B]8;;https://github.com\u0007', '\u001B]8;;\u0007']
```
## API
### ansiRegex(options?)
Returns a regex for matching ANSI escape codes.
#### options
Type: `object`
##### onlyFirst
Type: `boolean`<br>
Default: `false` *(Matches any ANSI escape codes in a string)*
Match only the first ANSI escape.
## FAQ
### Why do you test for codes not in the ECMA 48 standard?
Some of the codes we run as a test are codes that we acquired finding various lists of non-standard or manufacturer specific codes. We test for both standard and non-standard codes, as most of them follow the same or similar format and can be safely matched in strings without the risk of removing actual string content. There are a few non-standard control codes that do not follow the traditional format (i.e. they end in numbers) thus forcing us to exclude them from the test because we cannot reliably match them.
On the historical side, those ECMA standards were established in the early 90's whereas the VT100, for example, was designed in the mid/late 70's. At that point in time, control codes were still pretty ungoverned and engineers used them for a multitude of things, namely to activate hardware ports that may have been proprietary. Somewhere else you see a similar 'anarchy' of codes is in the x86 architecture for processors; there are a ton of "interrupts" that can mean different things on certain brands of processors, most of which have been phased out.
## Maintainers
- [Sindre Sorhus](https://github.com/sindresorhus)
- [Josh Junon](https://github.com/qix-)
---
<div align="center">
<b>
<a href="https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ansi-regex?utm_source=npm-ansi-regex&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme">Get professional support for this package with a Tidelift subscription</a>
</b>
<br>
<sub>
Tidelift helps make open source sustainable for maintainers while giving companies<br>assurances about security, maintenance, and licensing for their dependencies.
</sub>
</div>
declare type CSSColor =
| 'aliceblue'
| 'antiquewhite'
| 'aqua'
| 'aquamarine'
| 'azure'
| 'beige'
| 'bisque'
| 'black'
| 'blanchedalmond'
| 'blue'
| 'blueviolet'
| 'brown'
| 'burlywood'
| 'cadetblue'
| 'chartreuse'
| 'chocolate'
| 'coral'
| 'cornflowerblue'
| 'cornsilk'
| 'crimson'
| 'cyan'
| 'darkblue'
| 'darkcyan'
| 'darkgoldenrod'
| 'darkgray'
| 'darkgreen'
| 'darkgrey'
| 'darkkhaki'
| 'darkmagenta'
| 'darkolivegreen'
| 'darkorange'
| 'darkorchid'
| 'darkred'
| 'darksalmon'
| 'darkseagreen'
| 'darkslateblue'
| 'darkslategray'
| 'darkslategrey'
| 'darkturquoise'
| 'darkviolet'
| 'deeppink'
| 'deepskyblue'
| 'dimgray'
| 'dimgrey'
| 'dodgerblue'
| 'firebrick'
| 'floralwhite'
| 'forestgreen'
| 'fuchsia'
| 'gainsboro'
| 'ghostwhite'
| 'gold'
| 'goldenrod'
| 'gray'
| 'green'
| 'greenyellow'
| 'grey'
| 'honeydew'
| 'hotpink'
| 'indianred'
| 'indigo'
| 'ivory'
| 'khaki'
| 'lavender'
| 'lavenderblush'
| 'lawngreen'
| 'lemonchiffon'
| 'lightblue'
| 'lightcoral'
| 'lightcyan'
| 'lightgoldenrodyellow'
| 'lightgray'
| 'lightgreen'
| 'lightgrey'
| 'lightpink'
| 'lightsalmon'
| 'lightseagreen'
| 'lightskyblue'
| 'lightslategray'
| 'lightslategrey'
| 'lightsteelblue'
| 'lightyellow'
| 'lime'
| 'limegreen'
| 'linen'
| 'magenta'
| 'maroon'
| 'mediumaquamarine'
| 'mediumblue'
| 'mediumorchid'
| 'mediumpurple'
| 'mediumseagreen'
| 'mediumslateblue'
| 'mediumspringgreen'
| 'mediumturquoise'
| 'mediumvioletred'
| 'midnightblue'
| 'mintcream'
| 'mistyrose'
| 'moccasin'
| 'navajowhite'
| 'navy'
| 'oldlace'
| 'olive'
| 'olivedrab'
| 'orange'
| 'orangered'
| 'orchid'
| 'palegoldenrod'
| 'palegreen'
| 'paleturquoise'
| 'palevioletred'
| 'papayawhip'
| 'peachpuff'
| 'peru'
| 'pink'
| 'plum'
| 'powderblue'
| 'purple'
| 'rebeccapurple'
| 'red'
| 'rosybrown'
| 'royalblue'
| 'saddlebrown'
| 'salmon'
| 'sandybrown'
| 'seagreen'
| 'seashell'
| 'sienna'
| 'silver'
| 'skyblue'
| 'slateblue'
| 'slategray'
| 'slategrey'
| 'snow'
| 'springgreen'
| 'steelblue'
| 'tan'
| 'teal'
| 'thistle'
| 'tomato'
| 'turquoise'
| 'violet'
| 'wheat'
| 'white'
| 'whitesmoke'
| 'yellow'
| 'yellowgreen';
declare namespace ansiStyles {
interface ColorConvert {
/**
The RGB color space.
@param red - (`0`-`255`)
@param green - (`0`-`255`)
@param blue - (`0`-`255`)
*/
rgb(red: number, green: number, blue: number): string;
/**
The RGB HEX color space.
@param hex - A hexadecimal string containing RGB data.
*/
hex(hex: string): string;
/**
@param keyword - A CSS color name.
*/
keyword(keyword: CSSColor): string;
/**
The HSL color space.
@param hue - (`0`-`360`)
@param saturation - (`0`-`100`)
@param lightness - (`0`-`100`)
*/
hsl(hue: number, saturation: number, lightness: number): string;
/**
The HSV color space.
@param hue - (`0`-`360`)
@param saturation - (`0`-`100`)
@param value - (`0`-`100`)
*/
hsv(hue: number, saturation: number, value: number): string;
/**
The HSV color space.
@param hue - (`0`-`360`)
@param whiteness - (`0`-`100`)
@param blackness - (`0`-`100`)
*/
hwb(hue: number, whiteness: number, blackness: number): string;
/**
Use a [4-bit unsigned number](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3/4-bit) to set text color.
*/
ansi(ansi: number): string;
/**
Use an [8-bit unsigned number](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#8-bit) to set text color.
*/
ansi256(ansi: number): string;
}
interface CSPair {
/**
The ANSI terminal control sequence for starting this style.
*/
readonly open: string;
/**
The ANSI terminal control sequence for ending this style.
*/
readonly close: string;
}
interface ColorBase {
readonly ansi: ColorConvert;
readonly ansi256: ColorConvert;
readonly ansi16m: ColorConvert;
/**
The ANSI terminal control sequence for ending this color.
*/
readonly close: string;
}
interface Modifier {
/**
Resets the current color chain.
*/
readonly reset: CSPair;
/**
Make text bold.
*/
readonly bold: CSPair;
/**
Emitting only a small amount of light.
*/
readonly dim: CSPair;
/**
Make text italic. (Not widely supported)
*/
readonly italic: CSPair;
/**
Make text underline. (Not widely supported)
*/
readonly underline: CSPair;
/**
Inverse background and foreground colors.
*/
readonly inverse: CSPair;
/**
Prints the text, but makes it invisible.
*/
readonly hidden: CSPair;
/**
Puts a horizontal line through the center of the text. (Not widely supported)
*/
readonly strikethrough: CSPair;
}
interface ForegroundColor {
readonly black: CSPair;
readonly red: CSPair;
readonly green: CSPair;
readonly yellow: CSPair;
readonly blue: CSPair;
readonly cyan: CSPair;
readonly magenta: CSPair;
readonly white: CSPair;
/**
Alias for `blackBright`.
*/
readonly gray: CSPair;
/**
Alias for `blackBright`.
*/
readonly grey: CSPair;
readonly blackBright: CSPair;
readonly redBright: CSPair;
readonly greenBright: CSPair;
readonly yellowBright: CSPair;
readonly blueBright: CSPair;
readonly cyanBright: CSPair;
readonly magentaBright: CSPair;
readonly whiteBright: CSPair;
}
interface BackgroundColor {
readonly bgBlack: CSPair;
readonly bgRed: CSPair;
readonly bgGreen: CSPair;
readonly bgYellow: CSPair;
readonly bgBlue: CSPair;
readonly bgCyan: CSPair;
readonly bgMagenta: CSPair;
readonly bgWhite: CSPair;
/**
Alias for `bgBlackBright`.
*/
readonly bgGray: CSPair;
/**
Alias for `bgBlackBright`.
*/
readonly bgGrey: CSPair;
readonly bgBlackBright: CSPair;
readonly bgRedBright: CSPair;
readonly bgGreenBright: CSPair;
readonly bgYellowBright: CSPair;
readonly bgBlueBright: CSPair;
readonly bgCyanBright: CSPair;
readonly bgMagentaBright: CSPair;
readonly bgWhiteBright: CSPair;
}
}
declare const ansiStyles: {
readonly modifier: ansiStyles.Modifier;
readonly color: ansiStyles.ForegroundColor & ansiStyles.ColorBase;
readonly bgColor: ansiStyles.BackgroundColor & ansiStyles.ColorBase;
readonly codes: ReadonlyMap<number, number>;
} & ansiStyles.BackgroundColor & ansiStyles.ForegroundColor & ansiStyles.Modifier;
export = ansiStyles;
'use strict';
const wrapAnsi16 = (fn, offset) => (...args) => {
const code = fn(...args);
return `\u001B[${code + offset}m`;
};
const wrapAnsi256 = (fn, offset) => (...args) => {
const code = fn(...args);
return `\u001B[${38 + offset};5;${code}m`;
};
const wrapAnsi16m = (fn, offset) => (...args) => {
const rgb = fn(...args);
return `\u001B[${38 + offset};2;${rgb[0]};${rgb[1]};${rgb[2]}m`;
};
const ansi2ansi = n => n;
const rgb2rgb = (r, g, b) => [r, g, b];
const setLazyProperty = (object, property, get) => {
Object.defineProperty(object, property, {
get: () => {
const value = get();
Object.defineProperty(object, property, {
value,
enumerable: true,
configurable: true
});
return value;
},
enumerable: true,
configurable: true
});
};
/** @type {typeof import('color-convert')} */
let colorConvert;
const makeDynamicStyles = (wrap, targetSpace, identity, isBackground) => {
if (colorConvert === undefined) {
colorConvert = require('color-convert');
}
const offset = isBackground ? 10 : 0;
const styles = {};
for (const [sourceSpace, suite] of Object.entries(colorConvert)) {
const name = sourceSpace === 'ansi16' ? 'ansi' : sourceSpace;
if (sourceSpace === targetSpace) {
styles[name] = wrap(identity, offset);
} else if (typeof suite === 'object') {
styles[name] = wrap(suite[targetSpace], offset);
}
}
return styles;
};
function assembleStyles() {
const codes = new Map();
const styles = {
modifier: {
reset: [0, 0],
// 21 isn't widely supported and 22 does the same thing
bold: [1, 22],
dim: [2, 22],
italic: [3, 23],
underline: [4, 24],
inverse: [7, 27],
hidden: [8, 28],
strikethrough: [9, 29]
},
color: {
black: [30, 39],
red: [31, 39],
green: [32, 39],
yellow: [33, 39],
blue: [34, 39],
magenta: [35, 39],
cyan: [36, 39],
white: [37, 39],
// Bright color
blackBright: [90, 39],
redBright: [91, 39],
greenBright: [92, 39],
yellowBright: [93, 39],
blueBright: [94, 39],
magentaBright: [95, 39],
cyanBright: [96, 39],
whiteBright: [97, 39]
},
bgColor: {
bgBlack: [40, 49],
bgRed: [41, 49],
bgGreen: [42, 49],
bgYellow: [43, 49],
bgBlue: [44, 49],
bgMagenta: [45, 49],
bgCyan: [46, 49],
bgWhite: [47, 49],
// Bright color
bgBlackBright: [100, 49],
bgRedBright: [101, 49],
bgGreenBright: [102, 49],
bgYellowBright: [103, 49],
bgBlueBright: [104, 49],
bgMagentaBright: [105, 49],
bgCyanBright: [106, 49],
bgWhiteBright: [107, 49]
}
};
// Alias bright black as gray (and grey)
styles.color.gray = styles.color.blackBright;
styles.bgColor.bgGray = styles.bgColor.bgBlackBright;
styles.color.grey = styles.color.blackBright;
styles.bgColor.bgGrey = styles.bgColor.bgBlackBright;
for (const [groupName, group] of Object.entries(styles)) {
for (const [styleName, style] of Object.entries(group)) {
styles[styleName] = {
open: `\u001B[${style[0]}m`,
close: `\u001B[${style[1]}m`
};
group[styleName] = styles[styleName];
codes.set(style[0], style[1]);
}
Object.defineProperty(styles, groupName, {
value: group,
enumerable: false
});
}
Object.defineProperty(styles, 'codes', {
value: codes,
enumerable: false
});
styles.color.close = '\u001B[39m';
styles.bgColor.close = '\u001B[49m';
setLazyProperty(styles.color, 'ansi', () => makeDynamicStyles(wrapAnsi16, 'ansi16', ansi2ansi, false));
setLazyProperty(styles.color, 'ansi256', () => makeDynamicStyles(wrapAnsi256, 'ansi256', ansi2ansi, false));
setLazyProperty(styles.color, 'ansi16m', () => makeDynamicStyles(wrapAnsi16m, 'rgb', rgb2rgb, false));
setLazyProperty(styles.bgColor, 'ansi', () => makeDynamicStyles(wrapAnsi16, 'ansi16', ansi2ansi, true));
setLazyProperty(styles.bgColor, 'ansi256', () => makeDynamicStyles(wrapAnsi256, 'ansi256', ansi2ansi, true));
setLazyProperty(styles.bgColor, 'ansi16m', () => makeDynamicStyles(wrapAnsi16m, 'rgb', rgb2rgb, true));
return styles;
}
// Make the export immutable
Object.defineProperty(module, 'exports', {
enumerable: true,
get: assembleStyles
});
MIT License
Copyright (c) Sindre Sorhus <sindresorhus@gmail.com> (sindresorhus.com)
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
{
"name": "ansi-styles",
"version": "4.3.0",
"description": "ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal",
"license": "MIT",
"repository": "chalk/ansi-styles",
"funding": "https://github.com/chalk/ansi-styles?sponsor=1",
"author": {
"name": "Sindre Sorhus",
"email": "sindresorhus@gmail.com",
"url": "sindresorhus.com"
},
"engines": {
"node": ">=8"
},
"scripts": {
"test": "xo && ava && tsd",
"screenshot": "svg-term --command='node screenshot' --out=screenshot.svg --padding=3 --width=55 --height=3 --at=1000 --no-cursor"
},
"files": [
"index.js",
"index.d.ts"
],
"keywords": [
"ansi",
"styles",
"color",
"colour",
"colors",
"terminal",
"console",
"cli",
"string",
"tty",
"escape",
"formatting",
"rgb",
"256",
"shell",
"xterm",
"log",
"logging",
"command-line",
"text"
],
"dependencies": {
"color-convert": "^2.0.1"
},
"devDependencies": {
"@types/color-convert": "^1.9.0",
"ava": "^2.3.0",
"svg-term-cli": "^2.1.1",
"tsd": "^0.11.0",
"xo": "^0.25.3"
}
}
# ansi-styles [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/chalk/ansi-styles.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/chalk/ansi-styles)
> [ANSI escape codes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Colors_and_Styles) for styling strings in the terminal
You probably want the higher-level [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk) module for styling your strings.
<img src="screenshot.svg" width="900">
## Install
```
$ npm install ansi-styles
```
## Usage
```js
const style = require('ansi-styles');
console.log(`${style.green.open}Hello world!${style.green.close}`);
// Color conversion between 16/256/truecolor
// NOTE: If conversion goes to 16 colors or 256 colors, the original color
// may be degraded to fit that color palette. This means terminals
// that do not support 16 million colors will best-match the
// original color.
console.log(style.bgColor.ansi.hsl(120, 80, 72) + 'Hello world!' + style.bgColor.close);
console.log(style.color.ansi256.rgb(199, 20, 250) + 'Hello world!' + style.color.close);
console.log(style.color.ansi16m.hex('#abcdef') + 'Hello world!' + style.color.close);
```
## API
Each style has an `open` and `close` property.
## Styles
### Modifiers
- `reset`
- `bold`
- `dim`
- `italic` *(Not widely supported)*
- `underline`
- `inverse`
- `hidden`
- `strikethrough` *(Not widely supported)*
### Colors
- `black`
- `red`
- `green`
- `yellow`
- `blue`
- `magenta`
- `cyan`
- `white`
- `blackBright` (alias: `gray`, `grey`)
- `redBright`
- `greenBright`
- `yellowBright`
- `blueBright`
- `magentaBright`
- `cyanBright`
- `whiteBright`
### Background colors
- `bgBlack`
- `bgRed`
- `bgGreen`
- `bgYellow`
- `bgBlue`
- `bgMagenta`
- `bgCyan`
- `bgWhite`
- `bgBlackBright` (alias: `bgGray`, `bgGrey`)
- `bgRedBright`
- `bgGreenBright`
- `bgYellowBright`
- `bgBlueBright`
- `bgMagentaBright`
- `bgCyanBright`
- `bgWhiteBright`
## Advanced usage
By 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.modifier`
- `style.color`
- `style.bgColor`
###### Example
```js
console.log(style.color.green.open);
```
Raw 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.
###### Example
```js
console.log(style.codes.get(36));
//=> 39
```
## [256 / 16 million (TrueColor) support](https://gist.github.com/XVilka/8346728)
`ansi-styles` uses the [`color-convert`](https://github.com/Qix-/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:
- `rgb`
- `hex`
- `keyword`
- `hsl`
- `hsv`
- `hwb`
- `ansi`
- `ansi256`
To use these, call the associated conversion function with the intended output, for example:
```js
style.color.ansi.rgb(100, 200, 15); // RGB to 16 color ansi foreground code
style.bgColor.ansi.rgb(100, 200, 15); // RGB to 16 color ansi background code
style.color.ansi256.hsl(120, 100, 60); // HSL to 256 color ansi foreground code
style.bgColor.ansi256.hsl(120, 100, 60); // HSL to 256 color ansi foreground code
style.color.ansi16m.hex('#C0FFEE'); // Hex (RGB) to 16 million color foreground code
style.bgColor.ansi16m.hex('#C0FFEE'); // Hex (RGB) to 16 million color background code
```
## Related
- [ansi-escapes](https://github.com/sindresorhus/ansi-escapes) - ANSI escape codes for manipulating the terminal
## Maintainers
- [Sindre Sorhus](https://github.com/sindresorhus)
- [Josh Junon](https://github.com/qix-)
## For enterprise
Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
The maintainers of `ansi-styles` and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source dependencies you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact dependencies you use. [Learn more.](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ansi-styles?utm_source=npm-ansi-styles&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo)
/**
Basic foreground colors.
[More colors here.](https://github.com/chalk/chalk/blob/master/readme.md#256-and-truecolor-color-support)
*/
declare type ForegroundColor =
| 'black'
| 'red'
| 'green'
| 'yellow'
| 'blue'
| 'magenta'
| 'cyan'
| 'white'
| 'gray'
| 'grey'
| 'blackBright'
| 'redBright'
| 'greenBright'
| 'yellowBright'
| 'blueBright'
| 'magentaBright'
| 'cyanBright'
| 'whiteBright';
/**
Basic background colors.
[More colors here.](https://github.com/chalk/chalk/blob/master/readme.md#256-and-truecolor-color-support)
*/
declare type BackgroundColor =
| 'bgBlack'
| 'bgRed'
| 'bgGreen'
| 'bgYellow'
| 'bgBlue'
| 'bgMagenta'
| 'bgCyan'
| 'bgWhite'
| 'bgGray'
| 'bgGrey'
| 'bgBlackBright'
| 'bgRedBright'
| 'bgGreenBright'
| 'bgYellowBright'
| 'bgBlueBright'
| 'bgMagentaBright'
| 'bgCyanBright'
| 'bgWhiteBright';
/**
Basic colors.
[More colors here.](https://github.com/chalk/chalk/blob/master/readme.md#256-and-truecolor-color-support)
*/
declare type Color = ForegroundColor | BackgroundColor;
declare type Modifiers =
| 'reset'
| 'bold'
| 'dim'
| 'italic'
| 'underline'
| 'inverse'
| 'hidden'
| 'strikethrough'
| 'visible';
declare namespace chalk {
/**
Levels:
- `0` - All colors disabled.
- `1` - Basic 16 colors support.
- `2` - ANSI 256 colors support.
- `3` - Truecolor 16 million colors support.
*/
type Level = 0 | 1 | 2 | 3;
interface Options {
/**
Specify the color support for Chalk.
By default, color support is automatically detected based on the environment.
Levels:
- `0` - All colors disabled.
- `1` - Basic 16 colors support.
- `2` - ANSI 256 colors support.
- `3` - Truecolor 16 million colors support.
*/
level?: Level;
}
/**
Return a new Chalk instance.
*/
type Instance = new (options?: Options) => Chalk;
/**
Detect whether the terminal supports color.
*/
interface ColorSupport {
/**
The color level used by Chalk.
*/
level: Level;
/**
Return whether Chalk supports basic 16 colors.
*/
hasBasic: boolean;
/**
Return whether Chalk supports ANSI 256 colors.
*/
has256: boolean;
/**
Return whether Chalk supports Truecolor 16 million colors.
*/
has16m: boolean;
}
interface ChalkFunction {
/**
Use a template string.
@remarks Template literals are unsupported for nested calls (see [issue #341](https://github.com/chalk/chalk/issues/341))
@example
```
import chalk = require('chalk');
log(chalk`
CPU: {red ${cpu.totalPercent}%}
RAM: {green ${ram.used / ram.total * 100}%}
DISK: {rgb(255,131,0) ${disk.used / disk.total * 100}%}
`);
```
@example
```
import chalk = require('chalk');
log(chalk.red.bgBlack`2 + 3 = {bold ${2 + 3}}`)
```
*/
(text: TemplateStringsArray, ...placeholders: unknown[]): string;
(...text: unknown[]): string;
}
interface Chalk extends ChalkFunction {
/**
Return a new Chalk instance.
*/
Instance: Instance;
/**
The color support for Chalk.
By default, color support is automatically detected based on the environment.
Levels:
- `0` - All colors disabled.
- `1` - Basic 16 colors support.
- `2` - ANSI 256 colors support.
- `3` - Truecolor 16 million colors support.
*/
level: Level;
/**
Use HEX value to set text color.
@param color - Hexadecimal value representing the desired color.
@example
```
import chalk = require('chalk');
chalk.hex('#DEADED');
```
*/
hex(color: string): Chalk;
/**
Use keyword color value to set text color.
@param color - Keyword value representing the desired color.
@example
```
import chalk = require('chalk');
chalk.keyword('orange');
```
*/
keyword(color: string): Chalk;
/**
Use RGB values to set text color.
*/
rgb(red: number, green: number, blue: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HSL values to set text color.
*/
hsl(hue: number, saturation: number, lightness: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HSV values to set text color.
*/
hsv(hue: number, saturation: number, value: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HWB values to set text color.
*/
hwb(hue: number, whiteness: number, blackness: number): Chalk;
/**
Use a [Select/Set Graphic Rendition](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#SGR_parameters) (SGR) [color code number](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3/4_bit) to set text color.
30 <= code && code < 38 || 90 <= code && code < 98
For example, 31 for red, 91 for redBright.
*/
ansi(code: number): Chalk;
/**
Use a [8-bit unsigned number](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#8-bit) to set text color.
*/
ansi256(index: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HEX value to set background color.
@param color - Hexadecimal value representing the desired color.
@example
```
import chalk = require('chalk');
chalk.bgHex('#DEADED');
```
*/
bgHex(color: string): Chalk;
/**
Use keyword color value to set background color.
@param color - Keyword value representing the desired color.
@example
```
import chalk = require('chalk');
chalk.bgKeyword('orange');
```
*/
bgKeyword(color: string): Chalk;
/**
Use RGB values to set background color.
*/
bgRgb(red: number, green: number, blue: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HSL values to set background color.
*/
bgHsl(hue: number, saturation: number, lightness: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HSV values to set background color.
*/
bgHsv(hue: number, saturation: number, value: number): Chalk;
/**
Use HWB values to set background color.
*/
bgHwb(hue: number, whiteness: number, blackness: number): Chalk;
/**
Use a [Select/Set Graphic Rendition](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#SGR_parameters) (SGR) [color code number](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3/4_bit) to set background color.
30 <= code && code < 38 || 90 <= code && code < 98
For example, 31 for red, 91 for redBright.
Use the foreground code, not the background code (for example, not 41, nor 101).
*/
bgAnsi(code: number): Chalk;
/**
Use a [8-bit unsigned number](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#8-bit) to set background color.
*/
bgAnsi256(index: number): Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Resets the current color chain.
*/
readonly reset: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Make text bold.
*/
readonly bold: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Emitting only a small amount of light.
*/
readonly dim: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Make text italic. (Not widely supported)
*/
readonly italic: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Make text underline. (Not widely supported)
*/
readonly underline: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Inverse background and foreground colors.
*/
readonly inverse: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Prints the text, but makes it invisible.
*/
readonly hidden: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Puts a horizontal line through the center of the text. (Not widely supported)
*/
readonly strikethrough: Chalk;
/**
Modifier: Prints the text only when Chalk has a color support level > 0.
Can be useful for things that are purely cosmetic.
*/
readonly visible: Chalk;
readonly black: Chalk;
readonly red: Chalk;
readonly green: Chalk;
readonly yellow: Chalk;
readonly blue: Chalk;
readonly magenta: Chalk;
readonly cyan: Chalk;
readonly white: Chalk;
/*
Alias for `blackBright`.
*/
readonly gray: Chalk;
/*
Alias for `blackBright`.
*/
readonly grey: Chalk;
readonly blackBright: Chalk;
readonly redBright: Chalk;
readonly greenBright: Chalk;
readonly yellowBright: Chalk;
readonly blueBright: Chalk;
readonly magentaBright: Chalk;
readonly cyanBright: Chalk;
readonly whiteBright: Chalk;
readonly bgBlack: Chalk;
readonly bgRed: Chalk;
readonly bgGreen: Chalk;
readonly bgYellow: Chalk;
readonly bgBlue: Chalk;
readonly bgMagenta: Chalk;
readonly bgCyan: Chalk;
readonly bgWhite: Chalk;
/*
Alias for `bgBlackBright`.
*/
readonly bgGray: Chalk;
/*
Alias for `bgBlackBright`.
*/
readonly bgGrey: Chalk;
readonly bgBlackBright: Chalk;
readonly bgRedBright: Chalk;
readonly bgGreenBright: Chalk;
readonly bgYellowBright: Chalk;
readonly bgBlueBright: Chalk;
readonly bgMagentaBright: Chalk;
readonly bgCyanBright: Chalk;
readonly bgWhiteBright: Chalk;
}
}
/**
Main Chalk object that allows to chain styles together.
Call the last one as a method with a string argument.
Order doesn't matter, and later styles take precedent in case of a conflict.
This simply means that `chalk.red.yellow.green` is equivalent to `chalk.green`.
*/
declare const chalk: chalk.Chalk & chalk.ChalkFunction & {
supportsColor: chalk.ColorSupport | false;
Level: chalk.Level;
Color: Color;
ForegroundColor: ForegroundColor;
BackgroundColor: BackgroundColor;
Modifiers: Modifiers;
stderr: chalk.Chalk & {supportsColor: chalk.ColorSupport | false};
};
export = chalk;
MIT License
Copyright (c) Sindre Sorhus <sindresorhus@gmail.com> (sindresorhus.com)
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
{
"name": "chalk",
"version": "4.1.1",
"description": "Terminal string styling done right",
"license": "MIT",
"repository": "chalk/chalk",
"funding": "https://github.com/chalk/chalk?sponsor=1",
"main": "source",
"engines": {
"node": ">=10"
},
"scripts": {
"test": "xo && nyc ava && tsd",
"bench": "matcha benchmark.js"
},
"files": [
"source",
"index.d.ts"
],
"keywords": [
"color",
"colour",
"colors",
"terminal",
"console",
"cli",
"string",
"str",
"ansi",
"style",
"styles",
"tty",
"formatting",
"rgb",
"256",
"shell",
"xterm",
"log",
"logging",
"command-line",
"text"
],
"dependencies": {
"ansi-styles": "^4.1.0",
"supports-color": "^7.1.0"
},
"devDependencies": {
"ava": "^2.4.0",
"coveralls": "^3.0.7",
"execa": "^4.0.0",
"import-fresh": "^3.1.0",
"matcha": "^0.7.0",
"nyc": "^15.0.0",
"resolve-from": "^5.0.0",
"tsd": "^0.7.4",
"xo": "^0.28.2"
},
"xo": {
"rules": {
"unicorn/prefer-string-slice": "off",
"unicorn/prefer-includes": "off",
"@typescript-eslint/member-ordering": "off",
"no-redeclare": "off",
"unicorn/string-content": "off",
"unicorn/better-regex": "off"
}
}
}
<h1 align="center">
<br>
<br>
<img width="320" src="media/logo.svg" alt="Chalk">
<br>
<br>
<br>
</h1>
> Terminal string styling done right
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/chalk/chalk.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/chalk/chalk) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/chalk/chalk/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/chalk/chalk?branch=master) [![npm dependents](https://badgen.net/npm/dependents/chalk)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/chalk?activeTab=dependents) [![Downloads](https://badgen.net/npm/dt/chalk)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/chalk) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/unicorn-approved-ff69b4.svg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9auOCbH5Ns4) [![XO code style](https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-XO-5ed9c7.svg)](https://github.com/xojs/xo) ![TypeScript-ready](https://img.shields.io/npm/types/chalk.svg) [![run on repl.it](https://repl.it/badge/github/chalk/chalk)](https://repl.it/github/chalk/chalk)
<img src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/chalk/ansi-styles@8261697c95bf34b6c7767e2cbe9941a851d59385/screenshot.svg" width="900">
<br>
---
<div align="center">
<p>
<p>
<sup>
Sindre Sorhus' open source work is supported by the community on <a href="https://github.com/sponsors/sindresorhus">GitHub Sponsors</a> and <a href="https://stakes.social/0x44d871aebF0126Bf646753E2C976Aa7e68A66c15">Dev</a>
</sup>
</p>
<sup>Special thanks to:</sup>
<br>
<br>
<a href="https://standardresume.co/tech">
<img src="https://sindresorhus.com/assets/thanks/standard-resume-logo.svg" width="160"/>
</a>
<br>
<br>
<a href="https://retool.com/?utm_campaign=sindresorhus">
<img src="https://sindresorhus.com/assets/thanks/retool-logo.svg" width="210"/>
</a>
<br>
<br>
<a href="https://doppler.com/?utm_campaign=github_repo&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=chalk&utm_source=github">
<div>
<img src="https://dashboard.doppler.com/imgs/logo-long.svg" width="240" alt="Doppler">
</div>
<b>All your environment variables, in one place</b>
<div>
<span>Stop struggling with scattered API keys, hacking together home-brewed tools,</span>
<br>
<span>and avoiding access controls. Keep your team and servers in sync with Doppler.</span>
</div>
</a>
</p>
</div>
---
<br>
## Highlights
- Expressive API
- Highly performant
- Ability to nest styles
- [256/Truecolor color support](#256-and-truecolor-color-support)
- Auto-detects color support
- Doesn't extend `String.prototype`
- Clean and focused
- Actively maintained
- [Used by ~50,000 packages](https://www.npmjs.com/browse/depended/chalk) as of January 1, 2020
## Install
```console
$ npm install chalk
```
## Usage
```js
const chalk = require('chalk');
console.log(chalk.blue('Hello world!'));
```
Chalk comes with an easy to use composable API where you just chain and nest the styles you want.
```js
const chalk = require('chalk');
const log = console.log;
// Combine styled and normal strings
log(chalk.blue('Hello') + ' World' + chalk.red('!'));
// Compose multiple styles using the chainable API
log(chalk.blue.bgRed.bold('Hello world!'));
// Pass in multiple arguments
log(chalk.blue('Hello', 'World!', 'Foo', 'bar', 'biz', 'baz'));
// Nest styles
log(chalk.red('Hello', chalk.underline.bgBlue('world') + '!'));
// Nest styles of the same type even (color, underline, background)
log(chalk.green(
'I am a green line ' +
chalk.blue.underline.bold('with a blue substring') +
' that becomes green again!'
));
// ES2015 template literal
log(`
CPU: ${chalk.red('90%')}
RAM: ${chalk.green('40%')}
DISK: ${chalk.yellow('70%')}
`);
// ES2015 tagged template literal
log(chalk`
CPU: {red ${cpu.totalPercent}%}
RAM: {green ${ram.used / ram.total * 100}%}
DISK: {rgb(255,131,0) ${disk.used / disk.total * 100}%}
`);
// Use RGB colors in terminal emulators that support it.
log(chalk.keyword('orange')('Yay for orange colored text!'));
log(chalk.rgb(123, 45, 67).underline('Underlined reddish color'));
log(chalk.hex('#DEADED').bold('Bold gray!'));
```
Easily define your own themes:
```js
const chalk = require('chalk');
const error = chalk.bold.red;
const warning = chalk.keyword('orange');
console.log(error('Error!'));
console.log(warning('Warning!'));
```
Take advantage of console.log [string substitution](https://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/console.html#console_console_log_data_args):
```js
const name = 'Sindre';
console.log(chalk.green('Hello %s'), name);
//=> 'Hello Sindre'
```
## API
### chalk.`<style>[.<style>...](string, [string...])`
Example: `chalk.red.bold.underline('Hello', 'world');`
Chain [styles](#styles) and call the last one as a method with a string argument. Order doesn't matter, and later styles take precedent in case of a conflict. This simply means that `chalk.red.yellow.green` is equivalent to `chalk.green`.
Multiple arguments will be separated by space.
### chalk.level
Specifies the level of color support.
Color support is automatically detected, but you can override it by setting the `level` property. You should however only do this in your own code as it applies globally to all Chalk consumers.
If you need to change this in a reusable module, create a new instance:
```js
const ctx = new chalk.Instance({level: 0});
```
| Level | Description |
| :---: | :--- |
| `0` | All colors disabled |
| `1` | Basic color support (16 colors) |
| `2` | 256 color support |
| `3` | Truecolor support (16 million colors) |
### chalk.supportsColor
Detect whether the terminal [supports color](https://github.com/chalk/supports-color). Used internally and handled for you, but exposed for convenience.
Can be overridden by the user with the flags `--color` and `--no-color`. For situations where using `--color` is not possible, use the environment variable `FORCE_COLOR=1` (level 1), `FORCE_COLOR=2` (level 2), or `FORCE_COLOR=3` (level 3) to forcefully enable color, or `FORCE_COLOR=0` to forcefully disable. The use of `FORCE_COLOR` overrides all other color support checks.
Explicit 256/Truecolor mode can be enabled using the `--color=256` and `--color=16m` flags, respectively.
### chalk.stderr and chalk.stderr.supportsColor
`chalk.stderr` contains a separate instance configured with color support detected for `stderr` stream instead of `stdout`. Override rules from `chalk.supportsColor` apply to this too. `chalk.stderr.supportsColor` is exposed for convenience.
## Styles
### Modifiers
- `reset` - Resets the current color chain.
- `bold` - Make text bold.
- `dim` - Emitting only a small amount of light.
- `italic` - Make text italic. *(Not widely supported)*
- `underline` - Make text underline. *(Not widely supported)*
- `inverse`- Inverse background and foreground colors.
- `hidden` - Prints the text, but makes it invisible.
- `strikethrough` - Puts a horizontal line through the center of the text. *(Not widely supported)*
- `visible`- Prints the text only when Chalk has a color level > 0. Can be useful for things that are purely cosmetic.
### Colors
- `black`
- `red`
- `green`
- `yellow`
- `blue`
- `magenta`
- `cyan`
- `white`
- `blackBright` (alias: `gray`, `grey`)
- `redBright`
- `greenBright`
- `yellowBright`
- `blueBright`
- `magentaBright`
- `cyanBright`
- `whiteBright`
### Background colors
- `bgBlack`
- `bgRed`
- `bgGreen`
- `bgYellow`
- `bgBlue`
- `bgMagenta`
- `bgCyan`
- `bgWhite`
- `bgBlackBright` (alias: `bgGray`, `bgGrey`)
- `bgRedBright`
- `bgGreenBright`
- `bgYellowBright`
- `bgBlueBright`
- `bgMagentaBright`
- `bgCyanBright`
- `bgWhiteBright`
## Tagged template literal
Chalk can be used as a [tagged template literal](https://exploringjs.com/es6/ch_template-literals.html#_tagged-template-literals).
```js
const chalk = require('chalk');
const miles = 18;
const calculateFeet = miles => miles * 5280;
console.log(chalk`
There are {bold 5280 feet} in a mile.
In {bold ${miles} miles}, there are {green.bold ${calculateFeet(miles)} feet}.
`);
```
Blocks are delimited by an opening curly brace (`{`), a style, some content, and a closing curly brace (`}`).
Template styles are chained exactly like normal Chalk styles. The following three statements are equivalent:
```js
console.log(chalk.bold.rgb(10, 100, 200)('Hello!'));
console.log(chalk.bold.rgb(10, 100, 200)`Hello!`);
console.log(chalk`{bold.rgb(10,100,200) Hello!}`);
```
Note that function styles (`rgb()`, `hsl()`, `keyword()`, etc.) may not contain spaces between parameters.
All interpolated values (`` chalk`${foo}` ``) are converted to strings via the `.toString()` method. All curly braces (`{` and `}`) in interpolated value strings are escaped.
## 256 and Truecolor color support
Chalk supports 256 colors and [Truecolor](https://gist.github.com/XVilka/8346728) (16 million colors) on supported terminal apps.
Colors are downsampled from 16 million RGB values to an ANSI color format that is supported by the terminal emulator (or by specifying `{level: n}` as a Chalk option). For example, Chalk configured to run at level 1 (basic color support) will downsample an RGB value of #FF0000 (red) to 31 (ANSI escape for red).
Examples:
- `chalk.hex('#DEADED').underline('Hello, world!')`
- `chalk.keyword('orange')('Some orange text')`
- `chalk.rgb(15, 100, 204).inverse('Hello!')`
Background versions of these models are prefixed with `bg` and the first level of the module capitalized (e.g. `keyword` for foreground colors and `bgKeyword` for background colors).
- `chalk.bgHex('#DEADED').underline('Hello, world!')`
- `chalk.bgKeyword('orange')('Some orange text')`
- `chalk.bgRgb(15, 100, 204).inverse('Hello!')`
The following color models can be used:
- [`rgb`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RGB_color_model) - Example: `chalk.rgb(255, 136, 0).bold('Orange!')`
- [`hex`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_colors#Hex_triplet) - Example: `chalk.hex('#FF8800').bold('Orange!')`
- [`keyword`](https://www.w3.org/wiki/CSS/Properties/color/keywords) (CSS keywords) - Example: `chalk.keyword('orange').bold('Orange!')`
- [`hsl`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSL_and_HSV) - Example: `chalk.hsl(32, 100, 50).bold('Orange!')`
- [`hsv`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSL_and_HSV) - Example: `chalk.hsv(32, 100, 100).bold('Orange!')`
- [`hwb`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HWB_color_model) - Example: `chalk.hwb(32, 0, 50).bold('Orange!')`
- [`ansi`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3/4_bit) - Example: `chalk.ansi(31).bgAnsi(93)('red on yellowBright')`
- [`ansi256`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#8-bit) - Example: `chalk.bgAnsi256(194)('Honeydew, more or less')`
## Windows
If you're on Windows, do yourself a favor and use [Windows Terminal](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal) instead of `cmd.exe`.
## Origin story
[colors.js](https://github.com/Marak/colors.js) used to be the most popular string styling module, but it has serious deficiencies like extending `String.prototype` which causes all kinds of [problems](https://github.com/yeoman/yo/issues/68) and the package is unmaintained. Although there are other packages, they either do too much or not enough. Chalk is a clean and focused alternative.
## chalk for enterprise
Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
The maintainers of chalk and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source dependencies you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact dependencies you use. [Learn more.](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-chalk?utm_source=npm-chalk&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo)
## Related
- [chalk-cli](https://github.com/chalk/chalk-cli) - CLI for this module
- [ansi-styles](https://github.com/chalk/ansi-styles) - ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal
- [supports-color](https://github.com/chalk/supports-color) - Detect whether a terminal supports color
- [strip-ansi](https://github.com/chalk/strip-ansi) - Strip ANSI escape codes
- [strip-ansi-stream](https://github.com/chalk/strip-ansi-stream) - Strip ANSI escape codes from a stream
- [has-ansi](https://github.com/chalk/has-ansi) - Check if a string has ANSI escape codes
- [ansi-regex](https://github.com/chalk/ansi-regex) - Regular expression for matching ANSI escape codes
- [wrap-ansi](https://github.com/chalk/wrap-ansi) - Wordwrap a string with ANSI escape codes
- [slice-ansi](https://github.com/chalk/slice-ansi) - Slice a string with ANSI escape codes
- [color-convert](https://github.com/qix-/color-convert) - Converts colors between different models
- [chalk-animation](https://github.com/bokub/chalk-animation) - Animate strings in the terminal
- [gradient-string](https://github.com/bokub/gradient-string) - Apply color gradients to strings
- [chalk-pipe](https://github.com/LitoMore/chalk-pipe) - Create chalk style schemes with simpler style strings
- [terminal-link](https://github.com/sindresorhus/terminal-link) - Create clickable links in the terminal
## Maintainers
- [Sindre Sorhus](https://github.com/sindresorhus)
- [Josh Junon](https://github.com/qix-)
'use strict';
const ansiStyles = require('ansi-styles');
const {stdout: stdoutColor, stderr: stderrColor} = require('supports-color');
const {
stringReplaceAll,
stringEncaseCRLFWithFirstIndex
} = require('./util');
const {isArray} = Array;
// `supportsColor.level` → `ansiStyles.color[name]` mapping
const levelMapping = [
'ansi',
'ansi',
'ansi256',
'ansi16m'
];
const styles = Object.create(null);
const applyOptions = (object, options = {}) => {
if (options.level && !(Number.isInteger(options.level) && options.level >= 0 && options.level <= 3)) {
throw new Error('The `level` option should be an integer from 0 to 3');
}
// Detect level if not set manually
const colorLevel = stdoutColor ? stdoutColor.level : 0;
object.level = options.level === undefined ? colorLevel : options.level;
};
class ChalkClass {
constructor(options) {
// eslint-disable-next-line no-constructor-return
return chalkFactory(options);
}
}
const chalkFactory = options => {
const chalk = {};
applyOptions(chalk, options);
chalk.template = (...arguments_) => chalkTag(chalk.template, ...arguments_);
Object.setPrototypeOf(chalk, Chalk.prototype);
Object.setPrototypeOf(chalk.template, chalk);
chalk.template.constructor = () => {
throw new Error('`chalk.constructor()` is deprecated. Use `new chalk.Instance()` instead.');
};
chalk.template.Instance = ChalkClass;
return chalk.template;
};
function Chalk(options) {
return chalkFactory(options);
}
for (const [styleName, style] of Object.entries(ansiStyles)) {
styles[styleName] = {
get() {
const builder = createBuilder(this, createStyler(style.open, style.close, this._styler), this._isEmpty);
Object.defineProperty(this, styleName, {value: builder});
return builder;
}
};
}
styles.visible = {
get() {
const builder = createBuilder(this, this._styler, true);
Object.defineProperty(this, 'visible', {value: builder});
return builder;
}
};
const usedModels = ['rgb', 'hex', 'keyword', 'hsl', 'hsv', 'hwb', 'ansi', 'ansi256'];
for (const model of usedModels) {
styles[model] = {
get() {
const {level} = this;
return function (...arguments_) {
const styler = createStyler(ansiStyles.color[levelMapping[level]][model](...arguments_), ansiStyles.color.close, this._styler);
return createBuilder(this, styler, this._isEmpty);
};
}
};
}
for (const model of usedModels) {
const bgModel = 'bg' + model[0].toUpperCase() + model.slice(1);
styles[bgModel] = {
get() {
const {level} = this;
return function (...arguments_) {
const styler = createStyler(ansiStyles.bgColor[levelMapping[level]][model](...arguments_), ansiStyles.bgColor.close, this._styler);
return createBuilder(this, styler, this._isEmpty);
};
}
};
}
const proto = Object.defineProperties(() => {}, {
...styles,
level: {
enumerable: true,
get() {
return this._generator.level;
},
set(level) {
this._generator.level = level;
}
}
});
const createStyler = (open, close, parent) => {
let openAll;
let closeAll;
if (parent === undefined) {
openAll = open;
closeAll = close;
} else {
openAll = parent.openAll + open;
closeAll = close + parent.closeAll;
}
return {
open,
close,
openAll,
closeAll,
parent
};
};
const createBuilder = (self, _styler, _isEmpty) => {
const builder = (...arguments_) => {
if (isArray(arguments_[0]) && isArray(arguments_[0].raw)) {
// Called as a template literal, for example: chalk.red`2 + 3 = {bold ${2+3}}`
return applyStyle(builder, chalkTag(builder, ...arguments_));
}
// Single argument is hot path, implicit coercion is faster than anything
// eslint-disable-next-line no-implicit-coercion
return applyStyle(builder, (arguments_.length === 1) ? ('' + arguments_[0]) : arguments_.join(' '));
};
// We alter the prototype because we must return a function, but there is
// no way to create a function with a different prototype
Object.setPrototypeOf(builder, proto);
builder._generator = self;
builder._styler = _styler;
builder._isEmpty = _isEmpty;
return builder;
};
const applyStyle = (self, string) => {
if (self.level <= 0 || !string) {
return self._isEmpty ? '' : string;
}
let styler = self._styler;
if (styler === undefined) {
return string;
}
const {openAll, closeAll} = styler;
if (string.indexOf('\u001B') !== -1) {
while (styler !== undefined) {
// Replace any instances already present with a re-opening code
// otherwise only the part of the string until said closing code
// will be colored, and the rest will simply be 'plain'.
string = stringReplaceAll(string, styler.close, styler.open);
styler = styler.parent;
}
}
// We can move both next actions out of loop, because remaining actions in loop won't have
// any/visible effect on parts we add here. Close the styling before a linebreak and reopen
// after next line to fix a bleed issue on macOS: https://github.com/chalk/chalk/pull/92
const lfIndex = string.indexOf('\n');
if (lfIndex !== -1) {
string = stringEncaseCRLFWithFirstIndex(string, closeAll, openAll, lfIndex);
}
return openAll + string + closeAll;
};
let template;
const chalkTag = (chalk, ...strings) => {
const [firstString] = strings;
if (!isArray(firstString) || !isArray(firstString.raw)) {
// If chalk() was called by itself or with a string,
// return the string itself as a string.
return strings.join(' ');
}
const arguments_ = strings.slice(1);
const parts = [firstString.raw[0]];
for (let i = 1; i < firstString.length; i++) {
parts.push(
String(arguments_[i - 1]).replace(/[{}\\]/g, '\\$&'),
String(firstString.raw[i])
);
}
if (template === undefined) {
template = require('./templates');
}
return template(chalk, parts.join(''));
};
Object.defineProperties(Chalk.prototype, styles);
const chalk = Chalk(); // eslint-disable-line new-cap
chalk.supportsColor = stdoutColor;
chalk.stderr = Chalk({level: stderrColor ? stderrColor.level : 0}); // eslint-disable-line new-cap
chalk.stderr.supportsColor = stderrColor;
module.exports = chalk;
'use strict';
const TEMPLATE_REGEX = /(?:\\(u(?:[a-f\d]{4}|\{[a-f\d]{1,6}\})|x[a-f\d]{2}|.))|(?:\{(~)?(\w+(?:\([^)]*\))?(?:\.\w+(?:\([^)]*\))?)*)(?:[ \t]|(?=\r?\n)))|(\})|((?:.|[\r\n\f])+?)/gi;
const STYLE_REGEX = /(?:^|\.)(\w+)(?:\(([^)]*)\))?/g;
const STRING_REGEX = /^(['"])((?:\\.|(?!\1)[^\\])*)\1$/;
const ESCAPE_REGEX = /\\(u(?:[a-f\d]{4}|{[a-f\d]{1,6}})|x[a-f\d]{2}|.)|([^\\])/gi;
const ESCAPES = new Map([
['n', '\n'],
['r', '\r'],
['t', '\t'],
['b', '\b'],
['f', '\f'],
['v', '\v'],
['0', '\0'],
['\\', '\\'],
['e', '\u001B'],
['a', '\u0007']
]);
function unescape(c) {
const u = c[0] === 'u';
const bracket = c[1] === '{';
if ((u && !bracket && c.length === 5) || (c[0] === 'x' && c.length === 3)) {
return String.fromCharCode(parseInt(c.slice(1), 16));
}
if (u && bracket) {
return String.fromCodePoint(parseInt(c.slice(2, -1), 16));
}
return ESCAPES.get(c) || c;
}
function parseArguments(name, arguments_) {
const results = [];
const chunks = arguments_.trim().split(/\s*,\s*/g);
let matches;
for (const chunk of chunks) {
const number = Number(chunk);
if (!Number.isNaN(number)) {
results.push(number);
} else if ((matches = chunk.match(STRING_REGEX))) {
results.push(matches[2].replace(ESCAPE_REGEX, (m, escape, character) => escape ? unescape(escape) : character));
} else {
throw new Error(`Invalid Chalk template style argument: ${chunk} (in style '${name}')`);
}
}
return results;
}
function parseStyle(style) {
STYLE_REGEX.lastIndex = 0;
const results = [];
let matches;
while ((matches = STYLE_REGEX.exec(style)) !== null) {
const name = matches[1];
if (matches[2]) {
const args = parseArguments(name, matches[2]);
results.push([name].concat(args));
} else {
results.push([name]);
}
}
return results;
}
function buildStyle(chalk, styles) {
const enabled = {};
for (const layer of styles) {
for (const style of layer.styles) {
enabled[style[0]] = layer.inverse ? null : style.slice(1);
}
}
let current = chalk;
for (const [styleName, styles] of Object.entries(enabled)) {
if (!Array.isArray(styles)) {
continue;
}
if (!(styleName in current)) {
throw new Error(`Unknown Chalk style: ${styleName}`);
}
current = styles.length > 0 ? current[styleName](...styles) : current[styleName];
}
return current;
}
module.exports = (chalk, temporary) => {
const styles = [];
const chunks = [];
let chunk = [];
// eslint-disable-next-line max-params
temporary.replace(TEMPLATE_REGEX, (m, escapeCharacter, inverse, style, close, character) => {
if (escapeCharacter) {
chunk.push(unescape(escapeCharacter));
} else if (style) {
const string = chunk.join('');
chunk = [];
chunks.push(styles.length === 0 ? string : buildStyle(chalk, styles)(string));
styles.push({inverse, styles: parseStyle(style)});
} else if (close) {
if (styles.length === 0) {
throw new Error('Found extraneous } in Chalk template literal');
}
chunks.push(buildStyle(chalk, styles)(chunk.join('')));
chunk = [];
styles.pop();
} else {
chunk.push(character);
}
});
chunks.push(chunk.join(''));
if (styles.length > 0) {
const errMessage = `Chalk template literal is missing ${styles.length} closing bracket${styles.length === 1 ? '' : 's'} (\`}\`)`;
throw new Error(errMessage);
}
return chunks.join('');
};
'use strict';
const stringReplaceAll = (string, substring, replacer) => {
let index = string.indexOf(substring);
if (index === -1) {
return string;
}
const substringLength = substring.length;
let endIndex = 0;
let returnValue = '';
do {
returnValue += string.substr(endIndex, index - endIndex) + substring + replacer;
endIndex = index + substringLength;
index = string.indexOf(substring, endIndex);
} while (index !== -1);
returnValue += string.substr(endIndex);
return returnValue;
};
const stringEncaseCRLFWithFirstIndex = (string, prefix, postfix, index) => {
let endIndex = 0;
let returnValue = '';
do {
const gotCR = string[index - 1] === '\r';
returnValue += string.substr(endIndex, (gotCR ? index - 1 : index) - endIndex) + prefix + (gotCR ? '\r\n' : '\n') + postfix;
endIndex = index + 1;
index = string.indexOf('\n', endIndex);
} while (index !== -1);
returnValue += string.substr(endIndex);
return returnValue;
};
module.exports = {
stringReplaceAll,
stringEncaseCRLFWithFirstIndex
};
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