npm i chalky
/ yarn add chalky
Like chalk with fewer features, smaller in size (905 bytes), and self-contained (zero dependencies). Think of chalky
like a 'stripped down', basic version of chalk..
chalky
aims to provide a chalk-like experience, but for the most basic of console color features. Simple and small. 'Cheaply' add color to your console without worrying about the size of node_modules
.
We're not quite hardened chalk, but we're still chalky
😏
- Like chalk, chain methods together to change the foreground color, background color, add formatting (italic, bold, underline, etc..), for unique color/formatting combinations.
const chalky = require('chalky');
console.log(
chalky.italic.bgBlack.red.bold("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet")
);
- Output:
- The last color in the chain is what gets used:
const chalky = require('chalky');
// This line..
const a = chalky.red.green.blue.bgRed.bgBlack.bgYellow("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
// ...is equivalent to this line
const b = chalky.blue.bgYellow("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
console.log(`This: ${a}`);
console.log(`Should equal: ${b}`);
- Output:
const chalky = require('chalky');
// This line..
const a = chalky.red.blue("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
// ...is equivalent to this line
const b = chalky.blue("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
console.log(`This: ${a}`);
console.log(`Should equal: ${b}`);
- Output:
- Use
chalky.rainbow('Some string')
to 'rainbowify' a string
const chalky = require('chalky');
console.log(
chalky.rainbow("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet")
);
- Output:
-
Foreground Colors:
black
red
green
yellow
blue
magenta
cyan
white
-
Background Colors:
bgBlack
bgRed
bgGreen
bgYellow
bgBlue
bgMagenta
bgCyan
bgWhite
-
Formatting:
bold
light
italic
underline
blink
inverse
hidden
Two reasons...
I wanted to understand:
- How chalk was able to use properties with the same name as both a getter and method on the same object
- For example, you can do
chalk.blue('foo');
andchalk.blue.bold('foo');
(.blue
is being used as both a method and getter)
- For example, you can do
- How chalk was able to chain these properties/methods/getters
While modified, some of the code in this repo may resemble chalk as I followed the same logic.