ccat
is the colorizing cat
. It works similar to cat
but displays content with syntax highlighting.
- JavaScript
- Java
- Ruby
- Python
- Go
- C
$ brew install ccat
$ pacaur -S ccat
$ pacaur -S ccat-git
The ccat package will reflect the current release snapshot, while the ccat-git will be based on the current source available in the master branch of the git repo. You can use any AUR helper in place of pacaur AUR Helpers
ccat
can be easily installed as an executable.
Download the latest compiled binaries and put it in your executable path.
Prerequisites:
$ go get -u github.com/jingweno/ccat
$ ccat FILE1 FILE2 ...
$ ccat FILE1 FILE2 ... --html # output in HTML
$ ccat --bg=dark FILE1 FILE 2 ... # dark background
$ ccat -G String="_darkblue_" -G Plaintext="darkred" FILE # set color codes
$ ccat --palette # show palette
$ ccat # read from standard input
$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jingweno/ccat/master/main.go | ccat
It's recommended to alias ccat
to cat
:
alias cat=ccat
The overhead of ccat
comparing to cat
is mimimum:
$ wc -l main.go
123 main.go
$ time cat main.go > /dev/null
cat main.go > /dev/null 0.00s user 0.00s system 61% cpu 0.005 total
$ time ccat main.go > /dev/null
ccat main.go > /dev/null 0.00s user 0.00s system 78% cpu 0.007 total
You can always invoke cat
after aliasing ccat
by typing \cat
.
- nicer default color scheme
- ?
ccat
is designed to be distributed in one binary, run at native speed
and follow the POSIX standards. There're alternatives out there.
Use them at your own risk :):
Thanks to Sourcegraph who built this awesome syntax-highlighting package.