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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-05-04 17:35:20 +0000
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+.. _printing_text:
+
+Printing (and using) formatted text
+===================================
+
+Prompt_toolkit ships with a
+:func:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.print_formatted_text` function that's meant to
+be (as much as possible) compatible with the built-in print function, but on
+top of that, also supports colors and formatting.
+
+On Linux systems, this will output VT100 escape sequences, while on Windows it
+will use Win32 API calls or VT100 sequences, depending on what is available.
+
+.. note::
+
+ This page is also useful if you'd like to learn how to use formatting
+ in other places, like in a prompt or a toolbar. Just like
+ :func:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.print_formatted_text` takes any kind
+ of "formatted text" as input, prompts and toolbars also accept
+ "formatted text".
+
+Printing plain text
+-------------------
+
+The print function can be imported as follows:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text
+
+ print_formatted_text('Hello world')
+
+You can replace the built in ``print`` function as follows, if you want to.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text as print
+
+ print('Hello world')
+
+.. note::
+
+ If you're using Python 2, make sure to add ``from __future__ import
+ print_function``. Otherwise, it will not be possible to import a function
+ named ``print``.
+
+.. _formatted_text:
+
+Formatted text
+--------------
+
+There are several ways to display colors:
+
+- By creating an :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.HTML` object.
+- By creating an :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.ANSI` object that
+ contains ANSI escape sequences.
+- By creating a list of ``(style, text)`` tuples.
+- By creating a list of ``(pygments.Token, text)`` tuples, and wrapping it in
+ :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.PygmentsTokens`.
+
+An instance of any of these four kinds of objects is called "formatted text".
+There are various places in prompt toolkit, where we accept not just plain text
+(as a string), but also formatted text.
+
+HTML
+^^^^
+
+:class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.HTML` can be used to indicate that a
+string contains HTML-like formatting. It recognizes the basic tags for bold,
+italic and underline: ``<b>``, ``<i>`` and ``<u>``.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text, HTML
+
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<b>This is bold</b>'))
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<i>This is italic</i>'))
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<u>This is underlined</u>'))
+
+Further, it's possible to use tags for foreground colors:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ # Colors from the ANSI palette.
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<ansired>This is red</ansired>'))
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<ansigreen>This is green</ansigreen>'))
+
+ # Named colors (256 color palette, or true color, depending on the output).
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<skyblue>This is sky blue</skyblue>'))
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<seagreen>This is sea green</seagreen>'))
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<violet>This is violet</violet>'))
+
+Both foreground and background colors can also be specified setting the `fg`
+and `bg` attributes of any HTML tag:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ # Colors from the ANSI palette.
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<aaa fg="ansiwhite" bg="ansigreen">White on green</aaa>'))
+
+Underneath, all HTML tags are mapped to classes from a stylesheet, so you can
+assign a style for a custom tag.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text, HTML
+ from prompt_toolkit.styles import Style
+
+ style = Style.from_dict({
+ 'aaa': '#ff0066',
+ 'bbb': '#44ff00 italic',
+ })
+
+ print_formatted_text(HTML('<aaa>Hello</aaa> <bbb>world</bbb>!'), style=style)
+
+
+ANSI
+^^^^
+
+Some people like to use the VT100 ANSI escape sequences to generate output.
+Natively, this is however only supported on VT100 terminals, but prompt_toolkit
+can parse these, and map them to formatted text instances. This means that they
+will work on Windows as well. The :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.ANSI`
+class takes care of that.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text, ANSI
+
+ print_formatted_text(ANSI('\x1b[31mhello \x1b[32mworld'))
+
+Keep in mind that even on a Linux VT100 terminal, the final output produced by
+prompt_toolkit, is not necessarily exactly the same. Depending on the color
+depth, it is possible that colors are mapped to different colors, and unknown
+tags will be removed.
+
+
+(style, text) tuples
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Internally, both :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.HTML` and
+:class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.ANSI` objects are mapped to a list of
+``(style, text)`` tuples. It is however also possible to create such a list
+manually with :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.FormattedText` class.
+This is a little more verbose, but it's probably the most powerful
+way of expressing formatted text.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text
+ from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import FormattedText
+
+ text = FormattedText([
+ ('#ff0066', 'Hello'),
+ ('', ' '),
+ ('#44ff00 italic', 'World'),
+ ])
+
+ print_formatted_text(text)
+
+Similar to the :class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.HTML` example, it is also
+possible to use class names, and separate the styling in a style sheet.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text
+ from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import FormattedText
+ from prompt_toolkit.styles import Style
+
+ # The text.
+ text = FormattedText([
+ ('class:aaa', 'Hello'),
+ ('', ' '),
+ ('class:bbb', 'World'),
+ ])
+
+ # The style sheet.
+ style = Style.from_dict({
+ 'aaa': '#ff0066',
+ 'bbb': '#44ff00 italic',
+ })
+
+ print_formatted_text(text, style=style)
+
+
+Pygments ``(Token, text)`` tuples
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+When you have a list of `Pygments <http://pygments.org/>`_ ``(Token, text)``
+tuples, then these can be printed by wrapping them in a
+:class:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.PygmentsTokens` object.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from pygments.token import Token
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text
+ from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import PygmentsTokens
+
+ text = [
+ (Token.Keyword, 'print'),
+ (Token.Punctuation, '('),
+ (Token.Literal.String.Double, '"'),
+ (Token.Literal.String.Double, 'hello'),
+ (Token.Literal.String.Double, '"'),
+ (Token.Punctuation, ')'),
+ (Token.Text, '\n'),
+ ]
+
+ print_formatted_text(PygmentsTokens(text))
+
+
+Similarly, it is also possible to print the output of a Pygments lexer:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ import pygments
+ from pygments.token import Token
+ from pygments.lexers.python import PythonLexer
+
+ from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import PygmentsTokens
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text
+
+ # Printing the output of a pygments lexer.
+ tokens = list(pygments.lex('print("Hello")', lexer=PythonLexer()))
+ print_formatted_text(PygmentsTokens(tokens))
+
+Prompt_toolkit ships with a default colorscheme which styles it just like
+Pygments would do, but if you'd like to change the colors, keep in mind that
+Pygments tokens map to classnames like this:
+
++-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
+| pygments.Token | prompt_toolkit classname |
++===================================+=============================================+
+| - ``Token.Keyword`` | - ``"class:pygments.keyword"`` |
+| - ``Token.Punctuation`` | - ``"class:pygments.punctuation"`` |
+| - ``Token.Literal.String.Double`` | - ``"class:pygments.literal.string.double"``|
+| - ``Token.Text`` | - ``"class:pygments.text"`` |
+| - ``Token`` | - ``"class:pygments"`` |
++-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
+
+A classname like ``pygments.literal.string.double`` is actually decomposed in
+the following four classnames: ``pygments``, ``pygments.literal``,
+``pygments.literal.string`` and ``pygments.literal.string.double``. The final
+style is computed by combining the style for these four classnames. So,
+changing the style from these Pygments tokens can be done as follows:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit.styles import Style
+
+ style = Style.from_dict({
+ 'pygments.keyword': 'underline',
+ 'pygments.literal.string': 'bg:#00ff00 #ffffff',
+ })
+ print_formatted_text(PygmentsTokens(tokens), style=style)
+
+
+to_formatted_text
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+A useful function to know about is
+:func:`~prompt_toolkit.formatted_text.to_formatted_text`. This ensures that the
+given input is valid formatted text. While doing so, an additional style can be
+applied as well.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+ from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import to_formatted_text, HTML
+ from prompt_toolkit import print_formatted_text
+
+ html = HTML('<aaa>Hello</aaa> <bbb>world</bbb>!')
+ text = to_formatted_text(html, style='class:my_html bg:#00ff00 italic')
+
+ print_formatted_text(text)