| | Highlighting |
| | ============ |
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| | Rich can apply styles to patterns in text which you :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` or :meth:`~rich.console.Console.log`. With the default settings, Rich will highlight things such as numbers, strings, collections, booleans, None, and a few more exotic patterns such as file paths, URLs and UUIDs. |
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| | You can disable highlighting either by setting ``highlight=False`` on :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` or :meth:`~rich.console.Console.log`, or by setting ``highlight=False`` on the :class:`~rich.console.Console` constructor which disables it everywhere. If you disable highlighting on the constructor, you can still selectively *enable* highlighting with ``highlight=True`` on print/log. |
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| | Custom Highlighters |
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| | If the default highlighting doesn't fit your needs, you can define a custom highlighter. The easiest way to do this is to extend the :class:`~rich.highlighter.RegexHighlighter` class which applies a style to any text matching a list of regular expressions. |
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| | Here's an example which highlights text that looks like an email address:: |
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|
| | from rich.console import Console |
| | from rich.highlighter import RegexHighlighter |
| | from rich.theme import Theme |
| |
|
| | class EmailHighlighter(RegexHighlighter): |
| | """Apply style to anything that looks like an email.""" |
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|
| | base_style = "example." |
| | highlights = [r"(?P<email>[\w-]+@([\w-]+\.)+[\w-]+)"] |
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| | theme = Theme({"example.email": "bold magenta"}) |
| | console = Console(highlighter=EmailHighlighter(), theme=theme) |
| | console.print("Send funds to money@example.org") |
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| | The ``highlights`` class variable should contain a list of regular expressions. The group names of any matching expressions are prefixed with the ``base_style`` attribute and used as styles for matching text. In the example above, any email addresses will have the style "example.email" applied, which we've defined in a custom :ref:`Theme <themes>`. |
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| | Setting the highlighter on the Console will apply highlighting to all text you print (if enabled). You can also use a highlighter on a more granular level by using the instance as a callable and printing the result. For example, we could use the email highlighter class like this:: |
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| | |
| | console = Console(theme=theme) |
| | highlight_emails = EmailHighlighter() |
| | console.print(highlight_emails("Send funds to money@example.org")) |
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| | |
| | While :class:`~rich.highlighter.RegexHighlighter` is quite powerful, you can also extend its base class :class:`~rich.highlighter.Highlighter` to implement a custom scheme for highlighting. It contains a single method :class:`~rich.highlighter.Highlighter.highlight` which is passed the :class:`~rich.text.Text` to highlight. |
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| | Here's a silly example that highlights every character with a different color:: |
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|
| | from random import randint |
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| | from rich import print |
| | from rich.highlighter import Highlighter |
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| | class RainbowHighlighter(Highlighter): |
| | def highlight(self, text): |
| | for index in range(len(text)): |
| | text.stylize(f"color({randint(16, 255)})", index, index + 1) |
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| | rainbow = RainbowHighlighter() |
| | print(rainbow("I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer.")) |
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