termenv
termdash
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termenv | termdash | |
---|---|---|
6 | 3 | |
1,632 | 2,606 | |
- | - | |
6.0 | 7.8 | |
2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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termenv
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go playground code doesn't work locally?
For example: https://github.com/muesli/termenv // Clear the visible portion of the terminal output := termenv.NewOutput(os.Stdout) output.ClearScreen()
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tint: š slog.Handler that writes tinted logs
Why not let termenv do the hard part of making this portable across terminals? It also supports lesser-known conventions like NO_COLOR.
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Tran - š„ Securely transfer and send anything between computers with TUI.
Termenv
- Show HN: Lip Gloss a CSS-like layout library for the terminal for Go
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Tz: A Time Zone Helper
Look, you and I may have sane ANSI 16 colours, but itāll be a very significant fraction of people that donāt (and almost no one will customise the next 240 colours). Remember things like that thereās a fairly high chance that blue is almost invisible against black, and even bright blueās contrast is commonly much too lowāto say nothing of the limited palette range.
But what this program is doing is using termenvās HasDarkBackground function to decide whether the terminal is light or dark, and is then specifying RGB colours. Iād guess that itāll try to guess whether to use 16 colours, 256 colours or 24-bit colour, but I donāt know. But the way it figures out the terminalās background colourā¦ ugh. Some terminals will support it, but for many itāll fail and just assume black. Looks like on unix you could set an environment variable COLORFGBG to override this, https://github.com/muesli/termenv/blob/6bb55115565c27f4cc681..., but if youāre on Windows, tough luck, apparently youāre not allowed to have run `color f0` (Command Prompt) or similar: https://github.com/muesli/termenv/blob/537e36cb0472a69a3c828....
The simple fact of the matter is that there are no particularly good solutions for handling colour in terminals if you want the colours to cohere and map to real-world colour understanding, which is what something like this would prefer to be able to do.
termdash
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David Holladay, blindness technology pioneer, dies at age 70
[2] This is an example of that: https://github.com/mum4k/termdash?tab=readme-ov-file#the-lin...
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Terminal user interfaces
Temdash seems nice. https://github.com/mum4k/termdash
- A load testing tool with a real-time analyzer, written in Go
What are some alternatives?
pterm - āØ #PTerm is a modern Go module to easily beautify console output. Featuring charts, progressbars, tables, trees, text input, select menus and much more š It's completely configurable and 100% cross-platform compatible.
termui - Golang terminal dashboard
tcell - Tcell is an alternate terminal package, similar in some ways to termbox, but better in others.
bubbletea - A powerful little TUI framework š
termbox-go - Pure Go termbox implementation
go-prompt - Building powerful interactive prompts in Go, inspired by python-prompt-toolkit.
go-isatty
gocui - Minimalist Go package aimed at creating Console User Interfaces.
mpb - multi progress bar for Go cli applications
tui-go
progressbar - A really basic thread-safe progress bar for Golang applications