This is a module that allows you the change the colour of the terminal using the batch colour syntax. It works on all known platforms.
- colourise_output
- Description
- Table of Content
- Installation
- Usage
- Available colours
- Change the initialisation content
- Author
- Version
pip install -U colorama
pip install -U colourise-output
Under windows:
py -m pip install -U colorama
py -m pip install -U colourise-output
Under Linux/Mac OS:
python3 -m pip install -U colorama
python3 -m pip install -U colourise-output
import colourise_output as co
The generic class is: ColouriseOutput()
The generic loading function is: init_ressources(self)
The output is: None
COI = co.ColouriseOutput()
COI.init_ressources()
The generic function is:
test_colours(self, delay:int=0)
The output is: None
COI.test_colours()
Calling this function will result in the function displaying all the available colours as well as their colour code (what you use to call them).
Warning: Avoid this function if you are epileptic or set the delay to 1
COI.test_colours(1)
The generic function to ask a question is:
display(self, colour:str, attributes:tuple=(), text:str="")
The outputs of this function is: None The terminal will display the next lines in the desired colour.
COI.display("0A", (), "Hello World !\n")
The text "Hello World" will be displayed in green (A) on a black background (0).
answer = AQI.ask_question("How old are you?", "uint")
ADD_S = ""
if answer > 1:
ADD_S = "s"
print(f"You are {answer} year{ADD_S} old !")
Here is the windows colour pallet and how to use it:
- 0: Black
- 1: Blue
- 2: Green
- 3: Aqua
- 4: Red
- 5: Purple
- 6: Yellow
- 7: White
- 8: Gray
- 9: Light Blue
- A: Light Green
- B: Light Aqua
- C: Light Red
- D: Light Purple
- E: Light Yellow
- F: Bright White
When initialising the class it is possible to change the forbidden characters and/or the descriptions of the available types.
import ask_question as aq
illegal_characters = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ!\"#$%&\'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\\]^_`{|}~ \\t\\n\\r\\x0b\\x0c"
illegal_characters = illegal_characters.replace("0123456789","")
AQI = aq.AskQuestion(dict(), illegal_characters)
This initialisation has changed the characters that will be allowed for the number conversion in the 'int' and 'float' options.
import ask_question as aq
human_type = {
"int":"whole number (-1, 0, 1, 2, 3, etc...)",
"float":"floating number (-1.2, 0.1, 1.2, etc...)",
"uint":"whole positive number (0, 1, 2, etc...)",
"ufloat":"whole positive floating number (0.1, 1.2, etc ...)",
"num":"numeric (numbers from 0 onwards)",
"alnum":"alphanumeric (only numbers and the alphabet)",
"isalpha":"alphabet (from a to z and A to Z)",
"char":"alphabet (from a to z and A to Z)",
"ascii":"ascii Table",
"str":"string (any character you can type)",
"version":"version (numbers seperated by '.' characters)",
"ver":"version (numbers seperated by '.' characters)",
"bool":"boolean (yes/True/1 or no/False/0 answer type)",
}
AQI = aq.AskQuestion(human_type)
This initialisation has changed the descriptions for the types. When the user will enter a wrong answer, the description displayed for the type you were expecting will be taken from the human_type dictionnary you have entered.
import ask_question as aq
illegal_characters = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ!\"#$%&\'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\\]^_`{|}~ \\t\\n\\r\\x0b\\x0c"
illegal_characters = illegal_characters.replace("0123456789","")
human_type = {
"int":"whole number (-1, 0, 1, 2, 3, etc...)",
"float":"floating number (-1.2, 0.1, 1.2, etc...)",
"uint":"whole positive number (0, 1, 2, etc...)",
"ufloat":"whole positive floating number (0.1, 1.2, etc ...)",
"num":"numeric (numbers from 0 onwards)",
"alnum":"alphanumeric (only numbers and the alphabet)",
"isalpha":"alphabet (from a to z and A to Z)",
"char":"alphabet (from a to z and A to Z)",
"ascii":"ascii Table",
"str":"string (any character you can type)",
"version":"version (numbers seperated by '.' characters)",
"ver":"version (numbers seperated by '.' characters)",
"bool":"boolean (yes/True/1 or no/False/0 answer type)",
}
AQI = aq.AskQuestion(human_type)
You have now impacted the int and float typing as well as the 'type' descriptions.
This module was written by (c) Henry Letellier Attributions are appreciated.
Quick way (I assume you have already initialised the class):
print(f"AskQuestion is written by {AQI.author}")
The current version is 1.0.0
An easy way to display the version is:
import ask_question as aq
print(f"Version : {aq.__Version__}")