ansiwrap
wraps text, like the standard textwrap
module. But it also correctly wraps text that contains ANSI control sequences that colorize or style text.
Where textwrap
is fooled by the raw string length of those control codes, ansiwrap
is not; it understands that however much those codes affect color and display style, they have no logical length.
The API mirrors the wrap
, fill
, and shorten
functions of textwrap
. For example:
from __future__ import print_function
from colors import * # ansicolors on PyPI
from ansiwrap import *
s = ' '.join([red('this string'),
blue('is going on a bit long'),
green('and may need to be'),
color('shortened a bit', fg='purple')])
print('-- original string --')
print(s)
print('-- now filled --')
print(fill(s, 20))
print('-- now shortened / truncated --')
print(shorten(s, 20, placeholder='...'))
It also exports several other functions:
ansilen
(giving the effective length of a string, ignoring ANSI control codes)ansi_terminate_lines
(propogates control codes though a list of strings/lines and terminates each line.)strip_color
(removes ANSI control codes from a string)
See also the enclosed demo.py
.