From 3e3e70d529d8c7d7c4d7bc4fefc9f109393b9245 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:19:43 +0200 Subject: Merging upstream version 1.69.0+dfsg1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- vendor/ansi_term/.cargo-checksum.json | 1 - vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.lock | 168 ---------- vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.toml | 43 --- vendor/ansi_term/LICENCE | 21 -- vendor/ansi_term/README.md | 183 ---------- vendor/ansi_term/examples/256_colours.rs | 73 ---- vendor/ansi_term/examples/basic_colours.rs | 18 - vendor/ansi_term/examples/rgb_colours.rs | 23 -- vendor/ansi_term/src/ansi.rs | 374 --------------------- vendor/ansi_term/src/debug.rs | 134 -------- vendor/ansi_term/src/difference.rs | 179 ---------- vendor/ansi_term/src/display.rs | 296 ---------------- vendor/ansi_term/src/lib.rs | 271 --------------- vendor/ansi_term/src/style.rs | 521 ----------------------------- vendor/ansi_term/src/util.rs | 81 ----- vendor/ansi_term/src/windows.rs | 61 ---- vendor/ansi_term/src/write.rs | 40 --- 17 files changed, 2487 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/.cargo-checksum.json delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.lock delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.toml delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/LICENCE delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/README.md delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/examples/256_colours.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/examples/basic_colours.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/examples/rgb_colours.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/ansi.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/debug.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/difference.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/display.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/lib.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/style.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/util.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/windows.rs delete mode 100644 vendor/ansi_term/src/write.rs (limited to 'vendor/ansi_term') diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/.cargo-checksum.json b/vendor/ansi_term/.cargo-checksum.json deleted file mode 100644 index ee41459db..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/.cargo-checksum.json +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -{"files":{"Cargo.lock":"31bb7b361278d99a00595cbd916c444e6fd193b5f0b1ea0cf2d9454440739501","Cargo.toml":"4ca681d6949661455ac88541ffa68ebc7db50cb2b6e9a2134e6d0687da4997c3","LICENCE":"2762990c7fbba9d550802a2593c1d857dcd52596bb0f9f192a97e9a7ac5f4f9e","README.md":"8d983e1bb3cc99724010d9073a5be6452cd49bd57a877525fd0a5dd41e6591d5","examples/256_colours.rs":"5f2845068bc2d93cff4a61f18ffa44fbbbc91be771dfd686d537d343f37041da","examples/basic_colours.rs":"d610795f3743d10d90ec4e5ab32cc09fb16640896cecd2f93fca434a0920397c","examples/rgb_colours.rs":"8399e5131e959a56c932036b790e601fb4ad658856112daf87f933889b443f2c","src/ansi.rs":"988fb87936064fa006fcc9474ac62099c8d6e98d38bb80cec2cd864066482a08","src/debug.rs":"61343f8bf13695020102c033aeaacd9ccd3ec830eacbf9011127e61829451d20","src/difference.rs":"9b4b8f91c72932bfda262abdceff0ec124a5a8dd27d07bd4d2e5e7889135c6c9","src/display.rs":"c04f2397d1d1d86a5e2188c2840c505cb0baeaf9706a88d4bbe56eadc67811b9","src/lib.rs":"b85df4b9b8832cda777db049efa2ec84b9847438fa3feaf8540e597ce2532a47","src/style.rs":"1042fc973f5ea8bbb2a2faec334aad530520b53edc9b3296174ae38c1060490b","src/util.rs":"07c127f732887573a1c9126fc0288e13e7a8f1f803513b95e50aac2905171b0d","src/windows.rs":"7ce7dd6738b9728fcd3908c284b6f29a9bdfb34af761b4c7385cf7e3e1b20e64","src/write.rs":"c9ec03764ad1ecea8b680243c9cafc5e70919fcea7500cc18246ffd8f6bb4b33"},"package":"d52a9bb7ec0cf484c551830a7ce27bd20d67eac647e1befb56b0be4ee39a55d2"} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.lock b/vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.lock deleted file mode 100644 index b21004554..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/Cargo.lock +++ /dev/null @@ -1,168 +0,0 @@ -# This file is automatically @generated by Cargo. -# It is not intended for manual editing. -[[package]] -name = "aho-corasick" -version = "0.7.6" -source = "registry+https://github.com/rust-lang/crates.io-index" -dependencies = [ - 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If you're -# editing this file be aware that the upstream Cargo.toml -# will likely look very different (and much more reasonable) - -[package] -name = "ansi_term" -version = "0.12.1" -authors = ["ogham@bsago.me", "Ryan Scheel (Havvy) ", "Josh Triplett "] -description = "Library for ANSI terminal colours and styles (bold, underline)" -homepage = "https://github.com/ogham/rust-ansi-term" -documentation = "https://docs.rs/ansi_term" -readme = "README.md" -license = "MIT" -repository = "https://github.com/ogham/rust-ansi-term" - -[lib] -name = "ansi_term" -[dependencies.serde] -version = "1.0.90" -features = ["derive"] -optional = true -[dev-dependencies.doc-comment] -version = "0.3" - -[dev-dependencies.regex] -version = "1.1.9" - -[dev-dependencies.serde_json] -version = "1.0.39" - -[features] -derive_serde_style = ["serde"] -[target."cfg(target_os=\"windows\")".dependencies.winapi] -version = "0.3.4" -features = ["consoleapi", "errhandlingapi", "fileapi", "handleapi", "processenv"] diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/LICENCE b/vendor/ansi_term/LICENCE deleted file mode 100644 index 3228cc99b..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/LICENCE +++ /dev/null @@ -1,21 +0,0 @@ -The MIT License (MIT) - -Copyright (c) 2014 Benjamin Sago - -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. diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/README.md b/vendor/ansi_term/README.md deleted file mode 100644 index 30d52ab5f..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/README.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,183 +0,0 @@ -# rust-ansi-term [![ansi-term on crates.io](http://meritbadge.herokuapp.com/ansi-term)](https://crates.io/crates/ansi_term) [![Build status](https://img.shields.io/travis/ogham/rust-ansi-term/master.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/ogham/rust-ansi-term) [![Build status](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/ogham/rust-ansi-term/master.svg?style=flat&logo=AppVeyor&logoColor=silver)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/ogham/rust-ansi-term) [![Coverage status](https://coveralls.io/repos/ogham/rust-ansi-term/badge.svg?branch=master&service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/ogham/rust-ansi-term?branch=master) - -This is a library for controlling colours and formatting, such as red bold text or blue underlined text, on ANSI terminals. - -### [View the Rustdoc](https://docs.rs/ansi_term/) - - -# Installation - -This crate works with [Cargo](http://crates.io). Add the following to your `Cargo.toml` dependencies section: - -```toml -[dependencies] -ansi_term = "0.12" -``` - - -## Basic usage - -There are three main types in this crate that you need to be concerned with: `ANSIString`, `Style`, and `Colour`. - -A `Style` holds stylistic information: foreground and background colours, whether the text should be bold, or blinking, or other properties. -The `Colour` enum represents the available colours. -And an `ANSIString` is a string paired with a `Style`. - -`Color` is also available as an alias to `Colour`. - -To format a string, call the `paint` method on a `Style` or a `Colour`, passing in the string you want to format as the argument. -For example, here’s how to get some red text: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::Red; - -println!("This is in red: {}", Red.paint("a red string")); -``` - -It’s important to note that the `paint` method does *not* actually return a string with the ANSI control characters surrounding it. -Instead, it returns an `ANSIString` value that has a `Display` implementation that, when formatted, returns the characters. -This allows strings to be printed with a minimum of `String` allocations being performed behind the scenes. - -If you *do* want to get at the escape codes, then you can convert the `ANSIString` to a string as you would any other `Display` value: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::Red; - -let red_string = Red.paint("a red string").to_string(); -``` - -**Note for Windows 10 users:** On Windows 10, the application must enable ANSI support first: - -```rust,ignore -let enabled = ansi_term::enable_ansi_support(); -``` - -## Bold, underline, background, and other styles - -For anything more complex than plain foreground colour changes, you need to construct `Style` values themselves, rather than beginning with a `Colour`. -You can do this by chaining methods based on a new `Style`, created with `Style::new()`. -Each method creates a new style that has that specific property set. -For example: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Style; - -println!("How about some {} and {}?", - Style::new().bold().paint("bold"), - Style::new().underline().paint("underline")); -``` - -For brevity, these methods have also been implemented for `Colour` values, so you can give your styles a foreground colour without having to begin with an empty `Style` value: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::{Blue, Yellow}; - -println!("Demonstrating {} and {}!", - Blue.bold().paint("blue bold"), - Yellow.underline().paint("yellow underline")); - -println!("Yellow on blue: {}", Yellow.on(Blue).paint("wow!")); -``` - -The complete list of styles you can use are: -`bold`, `dimmed`, `italic`, `underline`, `blink`, `reverse`, `hidden`, and `on` for background colours. - -In some cases, you may find it easier to change the foreground on an existing `Style` rather than starting from the appropriate `Colour`. -You can do this using the `fg` method: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Style; -use ansi_term::Colour::{Blue, Cyan, Yellow}; - -println!("Yellow on blue: {}", Style::new().on(Blue).fg(Yellow).paint("yow!")); -println!("Also yellow on blue: {}", Cyan.on(Blue).fg(Yellow).paint("zow!")); -``` - -You can turn a `Colour` into a `Style` with the `normal` method. -This will produce the exact same `ANSIString` as if you just used the `paint` method on the `Colour` directly, but it’s useful in certain cases: for example, you may have a method that returns `Styles`, and need to represent both the “red bold” and “red, but not bold” styles with values of the same type. The `Style` struct also has a `Default` implementation if you want to have a style with *nothing* set. - -```rust -use ansi_term::Style; -use ansi_term::Colour::Red; - -Red.normal().paint("yet another red string"); -Style::default().paint("a completely regular string"); -``` - - -## Extended colours - -You can access the extended range of 256 colours by using the `Colour::Fixed` variant, which takes an argument of the colour number to use. -This can be included wherever you would use a `Colour`: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::Fixed; - -Fixed(134).paint("A sort of light purple"); -Fixed(221).on(Fixed(124)).paint("Mustard in the ketchup"); -``` - -The first sixteen of these values are the same as the normal and bold standard colour variants. -There’s nothing stopping you from using these as `Fixed` colours instead, but there’s nothing to be gained by doing so either. - -You can also access full 24-bit colour by using the `Colour::RGB` variant, which takes separate `u8` arguments for red, green, and blue: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::RGB; - -RGB(70, 130, 180).paint("Steel blue"); -``` - -## Combining successive coloured strings - -The benefit of writing ANSI escape codes to the terminal is that they *stack*: you do not need to end every coloured string with a reset code if the text that follows it is of a similar style. -For example, if you want to have some blue text followed by some blue bold text, it’s possible to send the ANSI code for blue, followed by the ANSI code for bold, and finishing with a reset code without having to have an extra one between the two strings. - -This crate can optimise the ANSI codes that get printed in situations like this, making life easier for your terminal renderer. -The `ANSIStrings` struct takes a slice of several `ANSIString` values, and will iterate over each of them, printing only the codes for the styles that need to be updated as part of its formatting routine. - -The following code snippet uses this to enclose a binary number displayed in red bold text inside some red, but not bold, brackets: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::Red; -use ansi_term::{ANSIString, ANSIStrings}; - -let some_value = format!("{:b}", 42); -let strings: &[ANSIString<'static>] = &[ - Red.paint("["), - Red.bold().paint(some_value), - Red.paint("]"), -]; - -println!("Value: {}", ANSIStrings(strings)); -``` - -There are several things to note here. -Firstly, the `paint` method can take *either* an owned `String` or a borrowed `&str`. -Internally, an `ANSIString` holds a copy-on-write (`Cow`) string value to deal with both owned and borrowed strings at the same time. -This is used here to display a `String`, the result of the `format!` call, using the same mechanism as some statically-available `&str` slices. -Secondly, that the `ANSIStrings` value works in the same way as its singular counterpart, with a `Display` implementation that only performs the formatting when required. - -## Byte strings - -This library also supports formatting `[u8]` byte strings; this supports applications working with text in an unknown encoding. -`Style` and `Colour` support painting `[u8]` values, resulting in an `ANSIByteString`. -This type does not implement `Display`, as it may not contain UTF-8, but it does provide a method `write_to` to write the result to any value that implements `Write`: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::Green; - -Green.paint("user data".as_bytes()).write_to(&mut std::io::stdout()).unwrap(); -``` - -Similarly, the type `ANSIByteStrings` supports writing a list of `ANSIByteString` values with minimal escape sequences: - -```rust -use ansi_term::Colour::Green; -use ansi_term::ANSIByteStrings; - -ANSIByteStrings(&[ - Green.paint("user data 1\n".as_bytes()), - Green.bold().paint("user data 2\n".as_bytes()), -]).write_to(&mut std::io::stdout()).unwrap(); -``` diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/examples/256_colours.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/examples/256_colours.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 92fe2f1c1..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/examples/256_colours.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,73 +0,0 @@ -extern crate ansi_term; -use ansi_term::Colour; - -// This example prints out the 256 colours. -// They're arranged like this: -// -// - 0 to 8 are the eight standard colours. -// - 9 to 15 are the eight bold colours. -// - 16 to 231 are six blocks of six-by-six colour squares. -// - 232 to 255 are shades of grey. - -fn main() { - - // First two lines - for c in 0..8 { - glow(c, c != 0); - print!(" "); - } - print!("\n"); - for c in 8..16 { - glow(c, c != 8); - print!(" "); - } - print!("\n\n"); - - // Six lines of the first three squares - for row in 0..6 { - for square in 0..3 { - for column in 0..6 { - glow(16 + square * 36 + row * 6 + column, row >= 3); - print!(" "); - } - - print!(" "); - } - - print!("\n"); - } - print!("\n"); - - // Six more lines of the other three squares - for row in 0..6 { - for square in 0..3 { - for column in 0..6 { - glow(124 + square * 36 + row * 6 + column, row >= 3); - print!(" "); - } - - print!(" "); - } - - print!("\n"); - } - print!("\n"); - - // The last greyscale lines - for c in 232..=243 { - glow(c, false); - print!(" "); - } - print!("\n"); - for c in 244..=255 { - glow(c, true); - print!(" "); - } - print!("\n"); -} - -fn glow(c: u8, light_bg: bool) { - let base = if light_bg { Colour::Black } else { Colour::White }; - let style = base.on(Colour::Fixed(c)); - print!("{}", style.paint(&format!(" {:3} ", c))); -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/examples/basic_colours.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/examples/basic_colours.rs deleted file mode 100644 index ba8815621..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/examples/basic_colours.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,18 +0,0 @@ -extern crate ansi_term; -use ansi_term::{Style, Colour::*}; - -// This example prints out the 16 basic colours. - -fn main() { - let normal = Style::default(); - - println!("{} {}", normal.paint("Normal"), normal.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Black.paint("Black"), Black.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Red.paint("Red"), Red.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Green.paint("Green"), Green.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Yellow.paint("Yellow"), Yellow.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Blue.paint("Blue"), Blue.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Purple.paint("Purple"), Purple.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", Cyan.paint("Cyan"), Cyan.bold().paint("bold")); - println!("{} {}", White.paint("White"), White.bold().paint("bold")); -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/examples/rgb_colours.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/examples/rgb_colours.rs deleted file mode 100644 index fd2cc7a85..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/examples/rgb_colours.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,23 +0,0 @@ -extern crate ansi_term; -use ansi_term::{Style, Colour}; - -// This example prints out a colour gradient in a grid by calculating each -// character’s red, green, and blue components, and using 24-bit colour codes -// to display them. - -const WIDTH: i32 = 80; -const HEIGHT: i32 = 24; - -fn main() { - for row in 0 .. HEIGHT { - for col in 0 .. WIDTH { - let r = (row * 255 / HEIGHT) as u8; - let g = (col * 255 / WIDTH) as u8; - let b = 128; - - print!("{}", Style::default().on(Colour::RGB(r, g, b)).paint(" ")); - } - - print!("\n"); - } -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/ansi.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/ansi.rs deleted file mode 100644 index aaf215234..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/ansi.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,374 +0,0 @@ -use style::{Colour, Style}; - -use std::fmt; - -use write::AnyWrite; - - -// ---- generating ANSI codes ---- - -impl Style { - - /// Write any bytes that go *before* a piece of text to the given writer. - fn write_prefix(&self, f: &mut W) -> Result<(), W::Error> { - - // If there are actually no styles here, then don’t write *any* codes - // as the prefix. An empty ANSI code may not affect the terminal - // output at all, but a user may just want a code-free string. - if self.is_plain() { - return Ok(()); - } - - // Write the codes’ prefix, then write numbers, separated by - // semicolons, for each text style we want to apply. - write!(f, "\x1B[")?; - let mut written_anything = false; - - { - let mut write_char = |c| { - if written_anything { write!(f, ";")?; } - written_anything = true; - write!(f, "{}", c)?; - Ok(()) - }; - - if self.is_bold { write_char('1')? } - if self.is_dimmed { write_char('2')? } - if self.is_italic { write_char('3')? } - if self.is_underline { write_char('4')? } - if self.is_blink { write_char('5')? } - if self.is_reverse { write_char('7')? } - if self.is_hidden { write_char('8')? } - if self.is_strikethrough { write_char('9')? } - } - - // The foreground and background colours, if specified, need to be - // handled specially because the number codes are more complicated. - // (see `write_background_code` and `write_foreground_code`) - if let Some(bg) = self.background { - if written_anything { write!(f, ";")?; } - written_anything = true; - bg.write_background_code(f)?; - } - - if let Some(fg) = self.foreground { - if written_anything { write!(f, ";")?; } - fg.write_foreground_code(f)?; - } - - // All the codes end with an `m`, because reasons. - write!(f, "m")?; - - Ok(()) - } - - /// Write any bytes that go *after* a piece of text to the given writer. - fn write_suffix(&self, f: &mut W) -> Result<(), W::Error> { - if self.is_plain() { - Ok(()) - } - else { - write!(f, "{}", RESET) - } - } -} - - -/// The code to send to reset all styles and return to `Style::default()`. -pub static RESET: &str = "\x1B[0m"; - - - -impl Colour { - fn write_foreground_code(&self, f: &mut W) -> Result<(), W::Error> { - match *self { - Colour::Black => write!(f, "30"), - Colour::Red => write!(f, "31"), - Colour::Green => write!(f, "32"), - Colour::Yellow => write!(f, "33"), - Colour::Blue => write!(f, "34"), - Colour::Purple => write!(f, "35"), - Colour::Cyan => write!(f, "36"), - Colour::White => write!(f, "37"), - Colour::Fixed(num) => write!(f, "38;5;{}", &num), - Colour::RGB(r,g,b) => write!(f, "38;2;{};{};{}", &r, &g, &b), - } - } - - fn write_background_code(&self, f: &mut W) -> Result<(), W::Error> { - match *self { - Colour::Black => write!(f, "40"), - Colour::Red => write!(f, "41"), - Colour::Green => write!(f, "42"), - Colour::Yellow => write!(f, "43"), - Colour::Blue => write!(f, "44"), - Colour::Purple => write!(f, "45"), - Colour::Cyan => write!(f, "46"), - Colour::White => write!(f, "47"), - Colour::Fixed(num) => write!(f, "48;5;{}", &num), - Colour::RGB(r,g,b) => write!(f, "48;2;{};{};{}", &r, &g, &b), - } - } -} - - -/// Like `ANSIString`, but only displays the style prefix. -/// -/// This type implements the `Display` trait, meaning it can be written to a -/// `std::fmt` formatting without doing any extra allocation, and written to a -/// string with the `.to_string()` method. For examples, see -/// [`Style::prefix`](struct.Style.html#method.prefix). -#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)] -pub struct Prefix(Style); - -/// Like `ANSIString`, but only displays the difference between two -/// styles. -/// -/// This type implements the `Display` trait, meaning it can be written to a -/// `std::fmt` formatting without doing any extra allocation, and written to a -/// string with the `.to_string()` method. For examples, see -/// [`Style::infix`](struct.Style.html#method.infix). -#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)] -pub struct Infix(Style, Style); - -/// Like `ANSIString`, but only displays the style suffix. -/// -/// This type implements the `Display` trait, meaning it can be written to a -/// `std::fmt` formatting without doing any extra allocation, and written to a -/// string with the `.to_string()` method. For examples, see -/// [`Style::suffix`](struct.Style.html#method.suffix). -#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)] -pub struct Suffix(Style); - - -impl Style { - - /// The prefix bytes for this style. These are the bytes that tell the - /// terminal to use a different colour or font style. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour::Blue}; - /// - /// let style = Style::default().bold(); - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[1m", - /// style.prefix().to_string()); - /// - /// let style = Blue.bold(); - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[1;34m", - /// style.prefix().to_string()); - /// - /// let style = Style::default(); - /// assert_eq!("", - /// style.prefix().to_string()); - /// ``` - pub fn prefix(self) -> Prefix { - Prefix(self) - } - - /// The infix bytes between this style and `next` style. These are the bytes - /// that tell the terminal to change the style to `next`. These may include - /// a reset followed by the next colour and style, depending on the two styles. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour::Green}; - /// - /// let style = Style::default().bold(); - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[32m", - /// style.infix(Green.bold()).to_string()); - /// - /// let style = Green.normal(); - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[1m", - /// style.infix(Green.bold()).to_string()); - /// - /// let style = Style::default(); - /// assert_eq!("", - /// style.infix(style).to_string()); - /// ``` - pub fn infix(self, next: Style) -> Infix { - Infix(self, next) - } - - /// The suffix for this style. These are the bytes that tell the terminal - /// to reset back to its normal colour and font style. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour::Green}; - /// - /// let style = Style::default().bold(); - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[0m", - /// style.suffix().to_string()); - /// - /// let style = Green.normal().bold(); - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[0m", - /// style.suffix().to_string()); - /// - /// let style = Style::default(); - /// assert_eq!("", - /// style.suffix().to_string()); - /// ``` - pub fn suffix(self) -> Suffix { - Suffix(self) - } -} - - -impl Colour { - - /// The prefix bytes for this colour as a `Style`. These are the bytes - /// that tell the terminal to use a different colour or font style. - /// - /// See also [`Style::prefix`](struct.Style.html#method.prefix). - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour::Green; - /// - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[0m", - /// Green.suffix().to_string()); - /// ``` - pub fn prefix(self) -> Prefix { - Prefix(self.normal()) - } - - /// The infix bytes between this colour and `next` colour. These are the bytes - /// that tell the terminal to use the `next` colour, or to do nothing if - /// the two colours are equal. - /// - /// See also [`Style::infix`](struct.Style.html#method.infix). - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour::{Red, Yellow}; - /// - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[33m", - /// Red.infix(Yellow).to_string()); - /// ``` - pub fn infix(self, next: Colour) -> Infix { - Infix(self.normal(), next.normal()) - } - - /// The suffix for this colour as a `Style`. These are the bytes that - /// tell the terminal to reset back to its normal colour and font style. - /// - /// See also [`Style::suffix`](struct.Style.html#method.suffix). - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour::Purple; - /// - /// assert_eq!("\x1b[0m", - /// Purple.suffix().to_string()); - /// ``` - pub fn suffix(self) -> Suffix { - Suffix(self.normal()) - } -} - - -impl fmt::Display for Prefix { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { - let f: &mut fmt::Write = f; - self.0.write_prefix(f) - } -} - - -impl fmt::Display for Infix { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { - use difference::Difference; - - match Difference::between(&self.0, &self.1) { - Difference::ExtraStyles(style) => { - let f: &mut fmt::Write = f; - style.write_prefix(f) - }, - Difference::Reset => { - let f: &mut fmt::Write = f; - write!(f, "{}{}", RESET, self.1.prefix()) - }, - Difference::NoDifference => { - Ok(()) // nothing to write - }, - } - } -} - - -impl fmt::Display for Suffix { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { - let f: &mut fmt::Write = f; - self.0.write_suffix(f) - } -} - - - -#[cfg(test)] -mod test { - use style::Style; - use style::Colour::*; - - macro_rules! test { - ($name: ident: $style: expr; $input: expr => $result: expr) => { - #[test] - fn $name() { - assert_eq!($style.paint($input).to_string(), $result.to_string()); - - let mut v = Vec::new(); - $style.paint($input.as_bytes()).write_to(&mut v).unwrap(); - assert_eq!(v.as_slice(), $result.as_bytes()); - } - }; - } - - test!(plain: Style::default(); "text/plain" => "text/plain"); - test!(red: Red; "hi" => "\x1B[31mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(black: Black.normal(); "hi" => "\x1B[30mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(yellow_bold: Yellow.bold(); "hi" => "\x1B[1;33mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(yellow_bold_2: Yellow.normal().bold(); "hi" => "\x1B[1;33mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(blue_underline: Blue.underline(); "hi" => "\x1B[4;34mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(green_bold_ul: Green.bold().underline(); "hi" => "\x1B[1;4;32mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(green_bold_ul_2: Green.underline().bold(); "hi" => "\x1B[1;4;32mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(purple_on_white: Purple.on(White); "hi" => "\x1B[47;35mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(purple_on_white_2: Purple.normal().on(White); "hi" => "\x1B[47;35mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(yellow_on_blue: Style::new().on(Blue).fg(Yellow); "hi" => "\x1B[44;33mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(yellow_on_blue_2: Cyan.on(Blue).fg(Yellow); "hi" => "\x1B[44;33mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(cyan_bold_on_white: Cyan.bold().on(White); "hi" => "\x1B[1;47;36mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(cyan_ul_on_white: Cyan.underline().on(White); "hi" => "\x1B[4;47;36mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(cyan_bold_ul_on_white: Cyan.bold().underline().on(White); "hi" => "\x1B[1;4;47;36mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(cyan_ul_bold_on_white: Cyan.underline().bold().on(White); "hi" => "\x1B[1;4;47;36mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(fixed: Fixed(100); "hi" => "\x1B[38;5;100mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(fixed_on_purple: Fixed(100).on(Purple); "hi" => "\x1B[45;38;5;100mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(fixed_on_fixed: Fixed(100).on(Fixed(200)); "hi" => "\x1B[48;5;200;38;5;100mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(rgb: RGB(70,130,180); "hi" => "\x1B[38;2;70;130;180mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(rgb_on_blue: RGB(70,130,180).on(Blue); "hi" => "\x1B[44;38;2;70;130;180mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(blue_on_rgb: Blue.on(RGB(70,130,180)); "hi" => "\x1B[48;2;70;130;180;34mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(rgb_on_rgb: RGB(70,130,180).on(RGB(5,10,15)); "hi" => "\x1B[48;2;5;10;15;38;2;70;130;180mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(bold: Style::new().bold(); "hi" => "\x1B[1mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(underline: Style::new().underline(); "hi" => "\x1B[4mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(bunderline: Style::new().bold().underline(); "hi" => "\x1B[1;4mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(dimmed: Style::new().dimmed(); "hi" => "\x1B[2mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(italic: Style::new().italic(); "hi" => "\x1B[3mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(blink: Style::new().blink(); "hi" => "\x1B[5mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(reverse: Style::new().reverse(); "hi" => "\x1B[7mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(hidden: Style::new().hidden(); "hi" => "\x1B[8mhi\x1B[0m"); - test!(stricken: Style::new().strikethrough(); "hi" => "\x1B[9mhi\x1B[0m"); - - #[test] - fn test_infix() { - assert_eq!(Style::new().dimmed().infix(Style::new()).to_string(), "\x1B[0m"); - assert_eq!(White.dimmed().infix(White.normal()).to_string(), "\x1B[0m\x1B[37m"); - assert_eq!(White.normal().infix(White.bold()).to_string(), "\x1B[1m"); - assert_eq!(White.normal().infix(Blue.normal()).to_string(), "\x1B[34m"); - assert_eq!(Blue.bold().infix(Blue.bold()).to_string(), ""); - } -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/debug.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/debug.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 4877323ff..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/debug.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,134 +0,0 @@ -use std::fmt; - -use style::Style; - -/// Styles have a special `Debug` implementation that only shows the fields that -/// are set. Fields that haven’t been touched aren’t included in the output. -/// -/// This behaviour gets bypassed when using the alternate formatting mode -/// `format!("{:#?}")`. -/// -/// use ansi_term::Colour::{Red, Blue}; -/// assert_eq!("Style { fg(Red), on(Blue), bold, italic }", -/// format!("{:?}", Red.on(Blue).bold().italic())); -impl fmt::Debug for Style { - fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { - if fmt.alternate() { - fmt.debug_struct("Style") - .field("foreground", &self.foreground) - .field("background", &self.background) - .field("blink", &self.is_blink) - .field("bold", &self.is_bold) - .field("dimmed", &self.is_dimmed) - .field("hidden", &self.is_hidden) - .field("italic", &self.is_italic) - .field("reverse", &self.is_reverse) - .field("strikethrough", &self.is_strikethrough) - .field("underline", &self.is_underline) - .finish() - } - else if self.is_plain() { - fmt.write_str("Style {}") - } - else { - fmt.write_str("Style { ")?; - - let mut written_anything = false; - - if let Some(fg) = self.foreground { - if written_anything { fmt.write_str(", ")? } - written_anything = true; - write!(fmt, "fg({:?})", fg)? - } - - if let Some(bg) = self.background { - if written_anything { fmt.write_str(", ")? } - written_anything = true; - write!(fmt, "on({:?})", bg)? - } - - { - let mut write_flag = |name| { - if written_anything { fmt.write_str(", ")? } - written_anything = true; - fmt.write_str(name) - }; - - if self.is_blink { write_flag("blink")? } - if self.is_bold { write_flag("bold")? } - if self.is_dimmed { write_flag("dimmed")? } - if self.is_hidden { write_flag("hidden")? } - if self.is_italic { write_flag("italic")? } - if self.is_reverse { write_flag("reverse")? } - if self.is_strikethrough { write_flag("strikethrough")? } - if self.is_underline { write_flag("underline")? } - } - - write!(fmt, " }}") - } - } -} - - -#[cfg(test)] -mod test { - use style::Colour::*; - use style::Style; - - fn style() -> Style { - Style::new() - } - - macro_rules! test { - ($name: ident: $obj: expr => $result: expr) => { - #[test] - fn $name() { - assert_eq!($result, format!("{:?}", $obj)); - } - }; - } - - test!(empty: style() => "Style {}"); - test!(bold: style().bold() => "Style { bold }"); - test!(italic: style().italic() => "Style { italic }"); - test!(both: style().bold().italic() => "Style { bold, italic }"); - - test!(red: Red.normal() => "Style { fg(Red) }"); - test!(redblue: Red.normal().on(RGB(3, 2, 4)) => "Style { fg(Red), on(RGB(3, 2, 4)) }"); - - test!(everything: - Red.on(Blue).blink().bold().dimmed().hidden().italic().reverse().strikethrough().underline() => - "Style { fg(Red), on(Blue), blink, bold, dimmed, hidden, italic, reverse, strikethrough, underline }"); - - #[test] - fn long_and_detailed() { - extern crate regex; - let expected_debug = "Style { fg(Blue), bold }"; - let expected_pretty_repat = r##"(?x) - Style\s+\{\s+ - foreground:\s+Some\(\s+ - Blue,?\s+ - \),\s+ - background:\s+None,\s+ - blink:\s+false,\s+ - bold:\s+true,\s+ - dimmed:\s+false,\s+ - hidden:\s+false,\s+ - italic:\s+false,\s+ - reverse:\s+false,\s+ - strikethrough:\s+ - false,\s+ - underline:\s+false,?\s+ - \}"##; - let re = regex::Regex::new(expected_pretty_repat).unwrap(); - - let style = Blue.bold(); - let style_fmt_debug = format!("{:?}", style); - let style_fmt_pretty = format!("{:#?}", style); - println!("style_fmt_debug:\n{}", style_fmt_debug); - println!("style_fmt_pretty:\n{}", style_fmt_pretty); - - assert_eq!(expected_debug, style_fmt_debug); - assert!(re.is_match(&style_fmt_pretty)); - } -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/difference.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/difference.rs deleted file mode 100644 index b0de07f7e..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/difference.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,179 +0,0 @@ -use super::Style; - - -/// When printing out one coloured string followed by another, use one of -/// these rules to figure out which *extra* control codes need to be sent. -#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Copy, Debug)] -pub enum Difference { - - /// Print out the control codes specified by this style to end up looking - /// like the second string's styles. - ExtraStyles(Style), - - /// Converting between these two is impossible, so just send a reset - /// command and then the second string's styles. - Reset, - - /// The before style is exactly the same as the after style, so no further - /// control codes need to be printed. - NoDifference, -} - - -impl Difference { - - /// Compute the 'style difference' required to turn an existing style into - /// the given, second style. - /// - /// For example, to turn green text into green bold text, it's redundant - /// to write a reset command then a second green+bold command, instead of - /// just writing one bold command. This method should see that both styles - /// use the foreground colour green, and reduce it to a single command. - /// - /// This method returns an enum value because it's not actually always - /// possible to turn one style into another: for example, text could be - /// made bold and underlined, but you can't remove the bold property - /// without also removing the underline property. So when this has to - /// happen, this function returns None, meaning that the entire set of - /// styles should be reset and begun again. - pub fn between(first: &Style, next: &Style) -> Difference { - use self::Difference::*; - - // XXX(Havvy): This algorithm is kind of hard to replicate without - // having the Plain/Foreground enum variants, so I'm just leaving - // it commented out for now, and defaulting to Reset. - - if first == next { - return NoDifference; - } - - // Cannot un-bold, so must Reset. - if first.is_bold && !next.is_bold { - return Reset; - } - - if first.is_dimmed && !next.is_dimmed { - return Reset; - } - - if first.is_italic && !next.is_italic { - return Reset; - } - - // Cannot un-underline, so must Reset. - if first.is_underline && !next.is_underline { - return Reset; - } - - if first.is_blink && !next.is_blink { - return Reset; - } - - if first.is_reverse && !next.is_reverse { - return Reset; - } - - if first.is_hidden && !next.is_hidden { - return Reset; - } - - if first.is_strikethrough && !next.is_strikethrough { - return Reset; - } - - // Cannot go from foreground to no foreground, so must Reset. - if first.foreground.is_some() && next.foreground.is_none() { - return Reset; - } - - // Cannot go from background to no background, so must Reset. - if first.background.is_some() && next.background.is_none() { - return Reset; - } - - let mut extra_styles = Style::default(); - - if first.is_bold != next.is_bold { - extra_styles.is_bold = true; - } - - if first.is_dimmed != next.is_dimmed { - extra_styles.is_dimmed = true; - } - - if first.is_italic != next.is_italic { - extra_styles.is_italic = true; - } - - if first.is_underline != next.is_underline { - extra_styles.is_underline = true; - } - - if first.is_blink != next.is_blink { - extra_styles.is_blink = true; - } - - if first.is_reverse != next.is_reverse { - extra_styles.is_reverse = true; - } - - if first.is_hidden != next.is_hidden { - extra_styles.is_hidden = true; - } - - if first.is_strikethrough != next.is_strikethrough { - extra_styles.is_strikethrough = true; - } - - if first.foreground != next.foreground { - extra_styles.foreground = next.foreground; - } - - if first.background != next.background { - extra_styles.background = next.background; - } - - ExtraStyles(extra_styles) - } -} - - -#[cfg(test)] -mod test { - use super::*; - use super::Difference::*; - use style::Colour::*; - use style::Style; - - fn style() -> Style { - Style::new() - } - - macro_rules! test { - ($name: ident: $first: expr; $next: expr => $result: expr) => { - #[test] - fn $name() { - assert_eq!($result, Difference::between(&$first, &$next)); - } - }; - } - - test!(nothing: Green.normal(); Green.normal() => NoDifference); - test!(uppercase: Green.normal(); Green.bold() => ExtraStyles(style().bold())); - test!(lowercase: Green.bold(); Green.normal() => Reset); - test!(nothing2: Green.bold(); Green.bold() => NoDifference); - - test!(colour_change: Red.normal(); Blue.normal() => ExtraStyles(Blue.normal())); - - test!(addition_of_blink: style(); style().blink() => ExtraStyles(style().blink())); - test!(addition_of_dimmed: style(); style().dimmed() => ExtraStyles(style().dimmed())); - test!(addition_of_hidden: style(); style().hidden() => ExtraStyles(style().hidden())); - test!(addition_of_reverse: style(); style().reverse() => ExtraStyles(style().reverse())); - test!(addition_of_strikethrough: style(); style().strikethrough() => ExtraStyles(style().strikethrough())); - - test!(removal_of_strikethrough: style().strikethrough(); style() => Reset); - test!(removal_of_reverse: style().reverse(); style() => Reset); - test!(removal_of_hidden: style().hidden(); style() => Reset); - test!(removal_of_dimmed: style().dimmed(); style() => Reset); - test!(removal_of_blink: style().blink(); style() => Reset); -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/display.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/display.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 17c54f008..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/display.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,296 +0,0 @@ -use std::borrow::Cow; -use std::fmt; -use std::io; -use std::ops::Deref; - -use ansi::RESET; -use difference::Difference; -use style::{Style, Colour}; -use write::AnyWrite; - - -/// An `ANSIGenericString` includes a generic string type and a `Style` to -/// display that string. `ANSIString` and `ANSIByteString` are aliases for -/// this type on `str` and `\[u8]`, respectively. -#[derive(PartialEq, Debug)] -pub struct ANSIGenericString<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> -where ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - style: Style, - string: Cow<'a, S>, -} - - -/// Cloning an `ANSIGenericString` will clone its underlying string. -/// -/// # Examples -/// -/// ``` -/// use ansi_term::ANSIString; -/// -/// let plain_string = ANSIString::from("a plain string"); -/// let clone_string = plain_string.clone(); -/// assert_eq!(clone_string, plain_string); -/// ``` -impl<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> Clone for ANSIGenericString<'a, S> -where ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - fn clone(&self) -> ANSIGenericString<'a, S> { - ANSIGenericString { - style: self.style, - string: self.string.clone(), - } - } -} - -// You might think that the hand-written Clone impl above is the same as the -// one that gets generated with #[derive]. But it’s not *quite* the same! -// -// `str` is not Clone, and the derived Clone implementation puts a Clone -// constraint on the S type parameter (generated using --pretty=expanded): -// -// ↓_________________↓ -// impl <'a, S: ::std::clone::Clone + 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> ::std::clone::Clone -// for ANSIGenericString<'a, S> where -// ::Owned: fmt::Debug { ... } -// -// This resulted in compile errors when you tried to derive Clone on a type -// that used it: -// -// #[derive(PartialEq, Debug, Clone, Default)] -// pub struct TextCellContents(Vec>); -// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -// error[E0277]: the trait `std::clone::Clone` is not implemented for `str` -// -// The hand-written impl above can ignore that constraint and still compile. - - - -/// An ANSI String is a string coupled with the `Style` to display it -/// in a terminal. -/// -/// Although not technically a string itself, it can be turned into -/// one with the `to_string` method. -/// -/// # Examples -/// -/// ``` -/// use ansi_term::ANSIString; -/// use ansi_term::Colour::Red; -/// -/// let red_string = Red.paint("a red string"); -/// println!("{}", red_string); -/// ``` -/// -/// ``` -/// use ansi_term::ANSIString; -/// -/// let plain_string = ANSIString::from("a plain string"); -/// assert_eq!(&*plain_string, "a plain string"); -/// ``` -pub type ANSIString<'a> = ANSIGenericString<'a, str>; - -/// An `ANSIByteString` represents a formatted series of bytes. Use -/// `ANSIByteString` when styling text with an unknown encoding. -pub type ANSIByteString<'a> = ANSIGenericString<'a, [u8]>; - -impl<'a, I, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> From for ANSIGenericString<'a, S> -where I: Into>, - ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - fn from(input: I) -> ANSIGenericString<'a, S> { - ANSIGenericString { - string: input.into(), - style: Style::default(), - } - } -} - -impl<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> ANSIGenericString<'a, S> - where ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - - /// Directly access the style - pub fn style_ref(&self) -> &Style { - &self.style - } - - /// Directly access the style mutably - pub fn style_ref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Style { - &mut self.style - } -} - -impl<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> Deref for ANSIGenericString<'a, S> -where ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - type Target = S; - - fn deref(&self) -> &S { - self.string.deref() - } -} - - -/// A set of `ANSIGenericString`s collected together, in order to be -/// written with a minimum of control characters. -#[derive(Debug, PartialEq)] -pub struct ANSIGenericStrings<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> - (pub &'a [ANSIGenericString<'a, S>]) - where ::Owned: fmt::Debug, S: PartialEq; - -/// A set of `ANSIString`s collected together, in order to be written with a -/// minimum of control characters. -pub type ANSIStrings<'a> = ANSIGenericStrings<'a, str>; - -/// A function to construct an `ANSIStrings` instance. -#[allow(non_snake_case)] -pub fn ANSIStrings<'a>(arg: &'a [ANSIString<'a>]) -> ANSIStrings<'a> { - ANSIGenericStrings(arg) -} - -/// A set of `ANSIByteString`s collected together, in order to be -/// written with a minimum of control characters. -pub type ANSIByteStrings<'a> = ANSIGenericStrings<'a, [u8]>; - -/// A function to construct an `ANSIByteStrings` instance. -#[allow(non_snake_case)] -pub fn ANSIByteStrings<'a>(arg: &'a [ANSIByteString<'a>]) -> ANSIByteStrings<'a> { - ANSIGenericStrings(arg) -} - - -// ---- paint functions ---- - -impl Style { - - /// Paints the given text with this colour, returning an ANSI string. - #[must_use] - pub fn paint<'a, I, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized>(self, input: I) -> ANSIGenericString<'a, S> - where I: Into>, - ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - ANSIGenericString { - string: input.into(), - style: self, - } - } -} - - -impl Colour { - - /// Paints the given text with this colour, returning an ANSI string. - /// This is a short-cut so you don’t have to use `Blue.normal()` just - /// to get blue text. - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour::Blue; - /// println!("{}", Blue.paint("da ba dee")); - /// ``` - #[must_use] - pub fn paint<'a, I, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized>(self, input: I) -> ANSIGenericString<'a, S> - where I: Into>, - ::Owned: fmt::Debug { - ANSIGenericString { - string: input.into(), - style: self.normal(), - } - } -} - - -// ---- writers for individual ANSI strings ---- - -impl<'a> fmt::Display for ANSIString<'a> { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { - let w: &mut fmt::Write = f; - self.write_to_any(w) - } -} - -impl<'a> ANSIByteString<'a> { - /// Write an `ANSIByteString` to an `io::Write`. This writes the escape - /// sequences for the associated `Style` around the bytes. - pub fn write_to(&self, w: &mut W) -> io::Result<()> { - let w: &mut io::Write = w; - self.write_to_any(w) - } -} - -impl<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized> ANSIGenericString<'a, S> -where ::Owned: fmt::Debug, &'a S: AsRef<[u8]> { - fn write_to_any + ?Sized>(&self, w: &mut W) -> Result<(), W::Error> { - write!(w, "{}", self.style.prefix())?; - w.write_str(self.string.as_ref())?; - write!(w, "{}", self.style.suffix()) - } -} - - -// ---- writers for combined ANSI strings ---- - -impl<'a> fmt::Display for ANSIStrings<'a> { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { - let f: &mut fmt::Write = f; - self.write_to_any(f) - } -} - -impl<'a> ANSIByteStrings<'a> { - /// Write `ANSIByteStrings` to an `io::Write`. This writes the minimal - /// escape sequences for the associated `Style`s around each set of - /// bytes. - pub fn write_to(&self, w: &mut W) -> io::Result<()> { - let w: &mut io::Write = w; - self.write_to_any(w) - } -} - -impl<'a, S: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized + PartialEq> ANSIGenericStrings<'a, S> -where ::Owned: fmt::Debug, &'a S: AsRef<[u8]> { - fn write_to_any + ?Sized>(&self, w: &mut W) -> Result<(), W::Error> { - use self::Difference::*; - - let first = match self.0.first() { - None => return Ok(()), - Some(f) => f, - }; - - write!(w, "{}", first.style.prefix())?; - w.write_str(first.string.as_ref())?; - - for window in self.0.windows(2) { - match Difference::between(&window[0].style, &window[1].style) { - ExtraStyles(style) => write!(w, "{}", style.prefix())?, - Reset => write!(w, "{}{}", RESET, window[1].style.prefix())?, - NoDifference => {/* Do nothing! */}, - } - - w.write_str(&window[1].string)?; - } - - // Write the final reset string after all of the ANSIStrings have been - // written, *except* if the last one has no styles, because it would - // have already been written by this point. - if let Some(last) = self.0.last() { - if !last.style.is_plain() { - write!(w, "{}", RESET)?; - } - } - - Ok(()) - } -} - - -// ---- tests ---- - -#[cfg(test)] -mod tests { - pub use super::super::ANSIStrings; - pub use style::Style; - pub use style::Colour::*; - - #[test] - fn no_control_codes_for_plain() { - let one = Style::default().paint("one"); - let two = Style::default().paint("two"); - let output = format!("{}", ANSIStrings( &[ one, two ] )); - assert_eq!(&*output, "onetwo"); - } -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/lib.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/lib.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 2d2f83ae6..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/lib.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,271 +0,0 @@ -//! This is a library for controlling colours and formatting, such as -//! red bold text or blue underlined text, on ANSI terminals. -//! -//! -//! ## Basic usage -//! -//! There are three main types in this crate that you need to be -//! concerned with: [`ANSIString`], [`Style`], and [`Colour`]. -//! -//! A `Style` holds stylistic information: foreground and background colours, -//! whether the text should be bold, or blinking, or other properties. The -//! [`Colour`] enum represents the available colours. And an [`ANSIString`] is a -//! string paired with a [`Style`]. -//! -//! [`Color`] is also available as an alias to `Colour`. -//! -//! To format a string, call the `paint` method on a `Style` or a `Colour`, -//! passing in the string you want to format as the argument. For example, -//! here’s how to get some red text: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Red; -//! -//! println!("This is in red: {}", Red.paint("a red string")); -//! ``` -//! -//! It’s important to note that the `paint` method does *not* actually return a -//! string with the ANSI control characters surrounding it. Instead, it returns -//! an [`ANSIString`] value that has a [`Display`] implementation that, when -//! formatted, returns the characters. This allows strings to be printed with a -//! minimum of [`String`] allocations being performed behind the scenes. -//! -//! If you *do* want to get at the escape codes, then you can convert the -//! [`ANSIString`] to a string as you would any other `Display` value: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Red; -//! -//! let red_string = Red.paint("a red string").to_string(); -//! ``` -//! -//! -//! ## Bold, underline, background, and other styles -//! -//! For anything more complex than plain foreground colour changes, you need to -//! construct `Style` values themselves, rather than beginning with a `Colour`. -//! You can do this by chaining methods based on a new `Style`, created with -//! [`Style::new()`]. Each method creates a new style that has that specific -//! property set. For example: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Style; -//! -//! println!("How about some {} and {}?", -//! Style::new().bold().paint("bold"), -//! Style::new().underline().paint("underline")); -//! ``` -//! -//! For brevity, these methods have also been implemented for `Colour` values, -//! so you can give your styles a foreground colour without having to begin with -//! an empty `Style` value: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::{Blue, Yellow}; -//! -//! println!("Demonstrating {} and {}!", -//! Blue.bold().paint("blue bold"), -//! Yellow.underline().paint("yellow underline")); -//! -//! println!("Yellow on blue: {}", Yellow.on(Blue).paint("wow!")); -//! ``` -//! -//! The complete list of styles you can use are: [`bold`], [`dimmed`], [`italic`], -//! [`underline`], [`blink`], [`reverse`], [`hidden`], [`strikethrough`], and [`on`] for -//! background colours. -//! -//! In some cases, you may find it easier to change the foreground on an -//! existing `Style` rather than starting from the appropriate `Colour`. -//! You can do this using the [`fg`] method: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Style; -//! use ansi_term::Colour::{Blue, Cyan, Yellow}; -//! -//! println!("Yellow on blue: {}", Style::new().on(Blue).fg(Yellow).paint("yow!")); -//! println!("Also yellow on blue: {}", Cyan.on(Blue).fg(Yellow).paint("zow!")); -//! ``` -//! -//! You can turn a `Colour` into a `Style` with the [`normal`] method. -//! This will produce the exact same `ANSIString` as if you just used the -//! `paint` method on the `Colour` directly, but it’s useful in certain cases: -//! for example, you may have a method that returns `Styles`, and need to -//! represent both the “red bold” and “red, but not bold” styles with values of -//! the same type. The `Style` struct also has a [`Default`] implementation if you -//! want to have a style with *nothing* set. -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Style; -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Red; -//! -//! Red.normal().paint("yet another red string"); -//! Style::default().paint("a completely regular string"); -//! ``` -//! -//! -//! ## Extended colours -//! -//! You can access the extended range of 256 colours by using the `Colour::Fixed` -//! variant, which takes an argument of the colour number to use. This can be -//! included wherever you would use a `Colour`: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Fixed; -//! -//! Fixed(134).paint("A sort of light purple"); -//! Fixed(221).on(Fixed(124)).paint("Mustard in the ketchup"); -//! ``` -//! -//! The first sixteen of these values are the same as the normal and bold -//! standard colour variants. There’s nothing stopping you from using these as -//! `Fixed` colours instead, but there’s nothing to be gained by doing so -//! either. -//! -//! You can also access full 24-bit colour by using the `Colour::RGB` variant, -//! which takes separate `u8` arguments for red, green, and blue: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::RGB; -//! -//! RGB(70, 130, 180).paint("Steel blue"); -//! ``` -//! -//! ## Combining successive coloured strings -//! -//! The benefit of writing ANSI escape codes to the terminal is that they -//! *stack*: you do not need to end every coloured string with a reset code if -//! the text that follows it is of a similar style. For example, if you want to -//! have some blue text followed by some blue bold text, it’s possible to send -//! the ANSI code for blue, followed by the ANSI code for bold, and finishing -//! with a reset code without having to have an extra one between the two -//! strings. -//! -//! This crate can optimise the ANSI codes that get printed in situations like -//! this, making life easier for your terminal renderer. The [`ANSIStrings`] -//! type takes a slice of several [`ANSIString`] values, and will iterate over -//! each of them, printing only the codes for the styles that need to be updated -//! as part of its formatting routine. -//! -//! The following code snippet uses this to enclose a binary number displayed in -//! red bold text inside some red, but not bold, brackets: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Red; -//! use ansi_term::{ANSIString, ANSIStrings}; -//! -//! let some_value = format!("{:b}", 42); -//! let strings: &[ANSIString<'static>] = &[ -//! Red.paint("["), -//! Red.bold().paint(some_value), -//! Red.paint("]"), -//! ]; -//! -//! println!("Value: {}", ANSIStrings(strings)); -//! ``` -//! -//! There are several things to note here. Firstly, the [`paint`] method can take -//! *either* an owned [`String`] or a borrowed [`&str`]. Internally, an [`ANSIString`] -//! holds a copy-on-write ([`Cow`]) string value to deal with both owned and -//! borrowed strings at the same time. This is used here to display a `String`, -//! the result of the `format!` call, using the same mechanism as some -//! statically-available `&str` slices. Secondly, that the [`ANSIStrings`] value -//! works in the same way as its singular counterpart, with a [`Display`] -//! implementation that only performs the formatting when required. -//! -//! ## Byte strings -//! -//! This library also supports formatting `\[u8]` byte strings; this supports -//! applications working with text in an unknown encoding. [`Style`] and -//! [`Colour`] support painting `\[u8]` values, resulting in an [`ANSIByteString`]. -//! This type does not implement [`Display`], as it may not contain UTF-8, but -//! it does provide a method [`write_to`] to write the result to any value that -//! implements [`Write`]: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Green; -//! -//! Green.paint("user data".as_bytes()).write_to(&mut std::io::stdout()).unwrap(); -//! ``` -//! -//! Similarly, the type [`ANSIByteStrings`] supports writing a list of -//! [`ANSIByteString`] values with minimal escape sequences: -//! -//! ``` -//! use ansi_term::Colour::Green; -//! use ansi_term::ANSIByteStrings; -//! -//! ANSIByteStrings(&[ -//! Green.paint("user data 1\n".as_bytes()), -//! Green.bold().paint("user data 2\n".as_bytes()), -//! ]).write_to(&mut std::io::stdout()).unwrap(); -//! ``` -//! -//! [`Cow`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/borrow/enum.Cow.html -//! [`Display`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fmt/trait.Display.html -//! [`Default`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/default/trait.Default.html -//! [`String`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct.String.html -//! [`&str`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.str.html -//! [`Write`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Write.html -//! [`Style`]: struct.Style.html -//! [`Style::new()`]: struct.Style.html#method.new -//! [`Color`]: enum.Color.html -//! [`Colour`]: enum.Colour.html -//! [`ANSIString`]: type.ANSIString.html -//! [`ANSIStrings`]: type.ANSIStrings.html -//! [`ANSIByteString`]: type.ANSIByteString.html -//! [`ANSIByteStrings`]: type.ANSIByteStrings.html -//! [`write_to`]: type.ANSIByteString.html#method.write_to -//! [`paint`]: type.ANSIByteString.html#method.write_to -//! [`normal`]: enum.Colour.html#method.normal -//! -//! [`bold`]: struct.Style.html#method.bold -//! [`dimmed`]: struct.Style.html#method.dimmed -//! [`italic`]: struct.Style.html#method.italic -//! [`underline`]: struct.Style.html#method.underline -//! [`blink`]: struct.Style.html#method.blink -//! [`reverse`]: struct.Style.html#method.reverse -//! [`hidden`]: struct.Style.html#method.hidden -//! [`strikethrough`]: struct.Style.html#method.strikethrough -//! [`fg`]: struct.Style.html#method.fg -//! [`on`]: struct.Style.html#method.on - -#![crate_name = "ansi_term"] -#![crate_type = "rlib"] -#![crate_type = "dylib"] - -#![warn(missing_copy_implementations)] -#![warn(missing_docs)] -#![warn(trivial_casts, trivial_numeric_casts)] -#![warn(unused_extern_crates, unused_qualifications)] - -#[cfg(target_os="windows")] -extern crate winapi; -#[cfg(test)] -#[macro_use] -extern crate doc_comment; - -#[cfg(test)] -doctest!("../README.md"); - -mod ansi; -pub use ansi::{Prefix, Infix, Suffix}; - -mod style; -pub use style::{Colour, Style}; - -/// Color is a type alias for `Colour`. -pub use Colour as Color; - -mod difference; -mod display; -pub use display::*; - -mod write; - -mod windows; -pub use windows::*; - -mod util; -pub use util::*; - -mod debug; diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/style.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/style.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 1bee4d91c..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/style.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,521 +0,0 @@ -/// A style is a collection of properties that can format a string -/// using ANSI escape codes. -/// -/// # Examples -/// -/// ``` -/// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour}; -/// -/// let style = Style::new().bold().on(Colour::Black); -/// println!("{}", style.paint("Bold on black")); -/// ``` -#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Copy)] -#[cfg_attr(feature = "derive_serde_style", derive(serde::Deserialize, serde::Serialize))] -pub struct Style { - - /// The style's foreground colour, if it has one. - pub foreground: Option, - - /// The style's background colour, if it has one. - pub background: Option, - - /// Whether this style is bold. - pub is_bold: bool, - - /// Whether this style is dimmed. - pub is_dimmed: bool, - - /// Whether this style is italic. - pub is_italic: bool, - - /// Whether this style is underlined. - pub is_underline: bool, - - /// Whether this style is blinking. - pub is_blink: bool, - - /// Whether this style has reverse colours. - pub is_reverse: bool, - - /// Whether this style is hidden. - pub is_hidden: bool, - - /// Whether this style is struckthrough. - pub is_strikethrough: bool -} - -impl Style { - - /// Creates a new Style with no properties set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("hi")); - /// ``` - pub fn new() -> Style { - Style::default() - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the bold property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().bold(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("hey")); - /// ``` - pub fn bold(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_bold: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the dimmed property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().dimmed(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("sup")); - /// ``` - pub fn dimmed(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_dimmed: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the italic property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().italic(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("greetings")); - /// ``` - pub fn italic(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_italic: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the underline property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().underline(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("salutations")); - /// ``` - pub fn underline(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_underline: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the blink property set. - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().blink(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("wazzup")); - /// ``` - pub fn blink(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_blink: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the reverse property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().reverse(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("aloha")); - /// ``` - pub fn reverse(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_reverse: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the hidden property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().hidden(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("ahoy")); - /// ``` - pub fn hidden(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_hidden: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the strikethrough property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().strikethrough(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("yo")); - /// ``` - pub fn strikethrough(&self) -> Style { - Style { is_strikethrough: true, .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour}; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().fg(Colour::Yellow); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("hi")); - /// ``` - pub fn fg(&self, foreground: Colour) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(foreground), .. *self } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the background colour property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour}; - /// - /// let style = Style::new().on(Colour::Blue); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("eyyyy")); - /// ``` - pub fn on(&self, background: Colour) -> Style { - Style { background: Some(background), .. *self } - } - - /// Return true if this `Style` has no actual styles, and can be written - /// without any control characters. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// - /// assert_eq!(true, Style::default().is_plain()); - /// assert_eq!(false, Style::default().bold().is_plain()); - /// ``` - pub fn is_plain(self) -> bool { - self == Style::default() - } -} - -impl Default for Style { - - /// Returns a style with *no* properties set. Formatting text using this - /// style returns the exact same text. - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Style; - /// assert_eq!(None, Style::default().foreground); - /// assert_eq!(None, Style::default().background); - /// assert_eq!(false, Style::default().is_bold); - /// assert_eq!("txt", Style::default().paint("txt").to_string()); - /// ``` - fn default() -> Style { - Style { - foreground: None, - background: None, - is_bold: false, - is_dimmed: false, - is_italic: false, - is_underline: false, - is_blink: false, - is_reverse: false, - is_hidden: false, - is_strikethrough: false, - } - } -} - - -// ---- colours ---- - -/// A colour is one specific type of ANSI escape code, and can refer -/// to either the foreground or background colour. -/// -/// These use the standard numeric sequences. -/// See -#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Copy, Debug)] -#[cfg_attr(feature = "derive_serde_style", derive(serde::Deserialize, serde::Serialize))] -pub enum Colour { - - /// Colour #0 (foreground code `30`, background code `40`). - /// - /// This is not necessarily the background colour, and using it as one may - /// render the text hard to read on terminals with dark backgrounds. - Black, - - /// Colour #1 (foreground code `31`, background code `41`). - Red, - - /// Colour #2 (foreground code `32`, background code `42`). - Green, - - /// Colour #3 (foreground code `33`, background code `43`). - Yellow, - - /// Colour #4 (foreground code `34`, background code `44`). - Blue, - - /// Colour #5 (foreground code `35`, background code `45`). - Purple, - - /// Colour #6 (foreground code `36`, background code `46`). - Cyan, - - /// Colour #7 (foreground code `37`, background code `47`). - /// - /// As above, this is not necessarily the foreground colour, and may be - /// hard to read on terminals with light backgrounds. - White, - - /// A colour number from 0 to 255, for use in 256-colour terminal - /// environments. - /// - /// - Colours 0 to 7 are the `Black` to `White` variants respectively. - /// These colours can usually be changed in the terminal emulator. - /// - Colours 8 to 15 are brighter versions of the eight colours above. - /// These can also usually be changed in the terminal emulator, or it - /// could be configured to use the original colours and show the text in - /// bold instead. It varies depending on the program. - /// - Colours 16 to 231 contain several palettes of bright colours, - /// arranged in six squares measuring six by six each. - /// - Colours 232 to 255 are shades of grey from black to white. - /// - /// It might make more sense to look at a [colour chart][cc]. - /// - /// [cc]: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/15/Xterm_256color_chart.svg - Fixed(u8), - - /// A 24-bit RGB color, as specified by ISO-8613-3. - RGB(u8, u8, u8), -} - - -impl Colour { - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Red.normal(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("hi")); - /// ``` - pub fn normal(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// bold property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Green.bold(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("hey")); - /// ``` - pub fn bold(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_bold: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// dimmed property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Yellow.dimmed(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("sup")); - /// ``` - pub fn dimmed(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_dimmed: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// italic property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Blue.italic(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("greetings")); - /// ``` - pub fn italic(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_italic: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// underline property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Purple.underline(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("salutations")); - /// ``` - pub fn underline(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_underline: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// blink property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Cyan.blink(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("wazzup")); - /// ``` - pub fn blink(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_blink: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// reverse property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Black.reverse(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("aloha")); - /// ``` - pub fn reverse(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_reverse: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// hidden property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::White.hidden(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("ahoy")); - /// ``` - pub fn hidden(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_hidden: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// strikethrough property set. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::Fixed(244).strikethrough(); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("yo")); - /// ``` - pub fn strikethrough(self) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), is_strikethrough: true, .. Style::default() } - } - - /// Returns a `Style` with the foreground colour set to this colour and the - /// background colour property set to the given colour. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::Colour; - /// - /// let style = Colour::RGB(31, 31, 31).on(Colour::White); - /// println!("{}", style.paint("eyyyy")); - /// ``` - pub fn on(self, background: Colour) -> Style { - Style { foreground: Some(self), background: Some(background), .. Style::default() } - } -} - -impl From for Style { - - /// You can turn a `Colour` into a `Style` with the foreground colour set - /// with the `From` trait. - /// - /// ``` - /// use ansi_term::{Style, Colour}; - /// let green_foreground = Style::default().fg(Colour::Green); - /// assert_eq!(green_foreground, Colour::Green.normal()); - /// assert_eq!(green_foreground, Colour::Green.into()); - /// assert_eq!(green_foreground, Style::from(Colour::Green)); - /// ``` - fn from(colour: Colour) -> Style { - colour.normal() - } -} - -#[cfg(test)] -#[cfg(feature = "derive_serde_style")] -mod serde_json_tests { - use super::{Style, Colour}; - - #[test] - fn colour_serialization() { - - let colours = &[ - Colour::Red, - Colour::Blue, - Colour::RGB(123, 123, 123), - Colour::Fixed(255), - ]; - - assert_eq!(serde_json::to_string(&colours).unwrap(), String::from("[\"Red\",\"Blue\",{\"RGB\":[123,123,123]},{\"Fixed\":255}]")); - } - - #[test] - fn colour_deserialization() { - let colours = &[ - Colour::Red, - Colour::Blue, - Colour::RGB(123, 123, 123), - Colour::Fixed(255), - ]; - - for colour in colours.into_iter() { - let serialized = serde_json::to_string(&colour).unwrap(); - let deserialized: Colour = serde_json::from_str(&serialized).unwrap(); - - assert_eq!(colour, &deserialized); - } - } - - #[test] - fn style_serialization() { - let style = Style::default(); - - assert_eq!(serde_json::to_string(&style).unwrap(), "{\"foreground\":null,\"background\":null,\"is_bold\":false,\"is_dimmed\":false,\"is_italic\":false,\"is_underline\":false,\"is_blink\":false,\"is_reverse\":false,\"is_hidden\":false,\"is_strikethrough\":false}".to_string()); - } -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/util.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/util.rs deleted file mode 100644 index ba0f12a02..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/util.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,81 +0,0 @@ -use display::*; -use std::ops::Deref; - -/// Return a substring of the given ANSIStrings sequence, while keeping the formatting. -pub fn sub_string<'a>(start: usize, len: usize, strs: &ANSIStrings<'a>) -> Vec> { - let mut vec = Vec::new(); - let mut pos = start; - let mut len_rem = len; - - for i in strs.0.iter() { - let fragment = i.deref(); - let frag_len = fragment.len(); - if pos >= frag_len { - pos -= frag_len; - continue; - } - if len_rem <= 0 { - break; - } - - let end = pos + len_rem; - let pos_end = if end >= frag_len { frag_len } else { end }; - - vec.push(i.style_ref().paint(String::from(&fragment[pos..pos_end]))); - - if end <= frag_len { - break; - } - - len_rem -= pos_end - pos; - pos = 0; - } - - vec -} - -/// Return a concatenated copy of `strs` without the formatting, as an allocated `String`. -pub fn unstyle(strs: &ANSIStrings) -> String { - let mut s = String::new(); - - for i in strs.0.iter() { - s += &i.deref(); - } - - s -} - -/// Return the unstyled length of ANSIStrings. This is equaivalent to `unstyle(strs).len()`. -pub fn unstyled_len(strs: &ANSIStrings) -> usize { - let mut l = 0; - for i in strs.0.iter() { - l += i.deref().len(); - } - l -} - -#[cfg(test)] -mod test { - use Colour::*; - use display::*; - use super::*; - - #[test] - fn test() { - let l = [ - Black.paint("first"), - Red.paint("-second"), - White.paint("-third"), - ]; - let a = ANSIStrings(&l); - assert_eq!(unstyle(&a), "first-second-third"); - assert_eq!(unstyled_len(&a), 18); - - let l2 = [ - Black.paint("st"), - Red.paint("-second"), - White.paint("-t"), - ]; - assert_eq!(sub_string(3, 11, &a).as_slice(), &l2); - } -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/windows.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/windows.rs deleted file mode 100644 index fcf02ecf6..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/windows.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,61 +0,0 @@ -/// Enables ANSI code support on Windows 10. -/// -/// This uses Windows API calls to alter the properties of the console that -/// the program is running in. -/// -/// https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/mt638032(v=vs.85).aspx -/// -/// Returns a `Result` with the Windows error code if unsuccessful. -#[cfg(windows)] -pub fn enable_ansi_support() -> Result<(), u32> { - // ref: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/console-virtual-terminal-sequences#EXAMPLE_OF_ENABLING_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING @@ https://archive.is/L7wRJ#76% - - use std::ffi::OsStr; - use std::iter::once; - use std::os::windows::ffi::OsStrExt; - use std::ptr::null_mut; - use winapi::um::consoleapi::{GetConsoleMode, SetConsoleMode}; - use winapi::um::errhandlingapi::GetLastError; - use winapi::um::fileapi::{CreateFileW, OPEN_EXISTING}; - use winapi::um::handleapi::INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; - use winapi::um::winnt::{FILE_SHARE_WRITE, GENERIC_READ, GENERIC_WRITE}; - - const ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING: u32 = 0x0004; - - unsafe { - // ref: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-createfilew - // Using `CreateFileW("CONOUT$", ...)` to retrieve the console handle works correctly even if STDOUT and/or STDERR are redirected - let console_out_name: Vec = OsStr::new("CONOUT$").encode_wide().chain(once(0)).collect(); - let console_handle = CreateFileW( - console_out_name.as_ptr(), - GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, - FILE_SHARE_WRITE, - null_mut(), - OPEN_EXISTING, - 0, - null_mut(), - ); - if console_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE - { - return Err(GetLastError()); - } - - // ref: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/getconsolemode - let mut console_mode: u32 = 0; - if 0 == GetConsoleMode(console_handle, &mut console_mode) - { - return Err(GetLastError()); - } - - // VT processing not already enabled? - if console_mode & ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING == 0 { - // https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/setconsolemode - if 0 == SetConsoleMode(console_handle, console_mode | ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING) - { - return Err(GetLastError()); - } - } - } - - return Ok(()); -} diff --git a/vendor/ansi_term/src/write.rs b/vendor/ansi_term/src/write.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 65a64feb2..000000000 --- a/vendor/ansi_term/src/write.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,40 +0,0 @@ -use std::fmt; -use std::io; - - -pub trait AnyWrite { - type wstr: ?Sized; - type Error; - - fn write_fmt(&mut self, fmt: fmt::Arguments) -> Result<(), Self::Error>; - - fn write_str(&mut self, s: &Self::wstr) -> Result<(), Self::Error>; -} - - -impl<'a> AnyWrite for fmt::Write + 'a { - type wstr = str; - type Error = fmt::Error; - - fn write_fmt(&mut self, fmt: fmt::Arguments) -> Result<(), Self::Error> { - fmt::Write::write_fmt(self, fmt) - } - - fn write_str(&mut self, s: &Self::wstr) -> Result<(), Self::Error> { - fmt::Write::write_str(self, s) - } -} - - -impl<'a> AnyWrite for io::Write + 'a { - type wstr = [u8]; - type Error = io::Error; - - fn write_fmt(&mut self, fmt: fmt::Arguments) -> Result<(), Self::Error> { - io::Write::write_fmt(self, fmt) - } - - fn write_str(&mut self, s: &Self::wstr) -> Result<(), Self::Error> { - io::Write::write_all(self, s) - } -} -- cgit v1.2.3