Awesome
ansi-escapes
ANSI escape codes for manipulating the terminal
Install
npm install ansi-escapes
Usage
import ansiEscapes from 'ansi-escapes';
// Moves the cursor two rows up and to the left
process.stdout.write(ansiEscapes.cursorUp(2) + ansiEscapes.cursorLeft);
//=> '\u001B[2A\u001B[1000D'
Or use named exports...
import {cursorUp, cursorLeft} from 'ansi-escapes';
// etc, as above...
You can also use it in the browser with Xterm.js:
import ansiEscapes from 'ansi-escapes';
import {Terminal} from 'xterm';
import 'xterm/css/xterm.css';
const terminal = new Terminal({…});
// Moves the cursor two rows up and to the left
terminal.write(ansiEscapes.cursorUp(2) + ansiEscapes.cursorLeft);
//=> '\u001B[2A\u001B[1000D'
API
cursorTo(x, y?)
Set the absolute position of the cursor. x0
y0
is the top left of the screen.
cursorMove(x, y?)
Set the position of the cursor relative to its current position.
cursorUp(count)
Move cursor up a specific amount of rows. Default is 1
.
cursorDown(count)
Move cursor down a specific amount of rows. Default is 1
.
cursorForward(count)
Move cursor forward a specific amount of columns. Default is 1
.
cursorBackward(count)
Move cursor backward a specific amount of columns. Default is 1
.
cursorLeft
Move cursor to the left side.
cursorSavePosition
Save cursor position.
cursorRestorePosition
Restore saved cursor position.
cursorGetPosition
Get cursor position.
cursorNextLine
Move cursor to the next line.
cursorPrevLine
Move cursor to the previous line.
cursorHide
Hide cursor.
cursorShow
Show cursor.
eraseLines(count)
Erase from the current cursor position up the specified amount of rows.
eraseEndLine
Erase from the current cursor position to the end of the current line.
eraseStartLine
Erase from the current cursor position to the start of the current line.
eraseLine
Erase the entire current line.
eraseDown
Erase the screen from the current line down to the bottom of the screen.
eraseUp
Erase the screen from the current line up to the top of the screen.
eraseScreen
Erase the screen and move the cursor the top left position.
scrollUp
Scroll display up one line.
scrollDown
Scroll display down one line.
clearScreen
Clear the terminal screen. (Viewport)
clearTerminal
Clear the whole terminal, including scrollback buffer. (Not just the visible part of it)
enterAlternativeScreen
Enter the alternative screen.
exitAlternativeScreen
Exit the alternative screen, assuming enterAlternativeScreen
was called before.
beep
Output a beeping sound.
link(text, url)
Create a clickable link.
Supported terminals. Use supports-hyperlinks
to detect link support.
image(filePath, options?)
Display an image.
See term-img for a higher-level module.
input
Type: Buffer
Buffer of an image. Usually read in with fs.readFile()
.
options
Type: object
width
height
Type: string | number
The width and height are given as a number followed by a unit, or the word "auto".
N
: N character cells.Npx
: N pixels.N%
: N percent of the session's width or height.auto
: The image's inherent size will be used to determine an appropriate dimension.
preserveAspectRatio
Type: boolean
Default: true
iTerm.setCwd(path?)
Type: string
Default: process.cwd()
Inform iTerm2 of the current directory to help semantic history and enable Cmd-clicking relative paths.
iTerm.annotation(message, options?)
Creates an escape code to display an "annotation" in iTerm2.
An annotation looks like this when shown:
<img src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/924465/64382136-b60ac700-cfe9-11e9-8a35-9682e8dc4b72.png" width="500">See the iTerm Proprietary Escape Codes documentation for more information.
message
Type: string
The message to display within the annotation.
The |
character is disallowed and will be stripped.
options
Type: object
length
Type: number
Default: The remainder of the line
Nonzero number of columns to annotate.
x
Type: number
Default: Cursor position
Starting X coordinate.
Must be used with y
and length
.
y
Type: number
Default: Cursor position
Starting Y coordinate.
Must be used with x
and length
.
isHidden
Type: boolean
Default: false
Create a "hidden" annotation.
Annotations created this way can be shown using the "Show Annotations" iTerm command.
Related
- ansi-styles - ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal