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| | .. _protocol: |
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| | Console Protocol |
| | ================ |
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| | Rich supports a simple protocol to add rich formatting capabilities to custom objects, so you can :meth:`~rich.console.Console.print` your object with color, styles and formatting. |
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| | Use this for presentation or to display additional debugging information that might be hard to parse from a typical ``__repr__`` string. |
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| | Console Customization |
| | --------------------- |
| |
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| | The easiest way to customize console output for your object is to implement a ``__rich__`` method. This method accepts no arguments, and should return an object that Rich knows how to render, such as a :class:`~rich.text.Text` or :class:`~rich.table.Table`. If you return a plain string it will be rendered as :ref:`console_markup`. Here |
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|
| | class MyObject: |
| | def __rich__(self) -> str: |
| | return "[bold cyan]MyObject()" |
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| | If you were to print or log an instance of ``MyObject`` it would render as ``MyObject()`` in bold cyan. Naturally, you would want to put this to better use, perhaps by adding specialized syntax highlighting. |
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| | Console Render |
| | -------------- |
| |
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| | The ``__rich__`` method is limited to a single renderable object. For more advanced rendering, add a ``__rich_console__`` method to your class. |
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| | The ``__rich_console__`` method should accept a :class:`~rich.console.Console` and a :class:`~rich.console.ConsoleOptions` instance. It should return an iterable of other renderable objects. Although that means it *could* return a container such as a list, it generally easier implemented by using the ``yield`` statement (making the method a generator). |
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|
| | Here |
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| | from dataclasses import dataclass |
| | from rich.console import Console, ConsoleOptions, RenderResult |
| | from rich.table import Table |
| |
|
| | @dataclass |
| | class Student: |
| | id: int |
| | name: str |
| | age: int |
| | def __rich_console__(self, console: Console, options: ConsoleOptions) -> RenderResult: |
| | yield f"[b]Student:[/b] #{self.id}" |
| | my_table = Table("Attribute", "Value") |
| | my_table.add_row("name", self.name) |
| | my_table.add_row("age", str(self.age)) |
| | yield my_table |
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|
| | If you were to print a ``Student`` instance, it would render a simple table to the terminal. |
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| | Low Level Render |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| | For complete control over how a custom object is rendered to the terminal, you can yield :class:`~rich.segment.Segment` objects. A Segment consists of a piece of text and an optional Style. The following example writes multi-colored text when rendering a ``MyObject`` instance:: |
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|
| | class MyObject: |
| | def __rich_console__(self, console: Console, options: ConsoleOptions) -> RenderResult: |
| | yield Segment("My", Style(color="magenta")) |
| | yield Segment("Object", Style(color="green")) |
| | yield Segment("()", Style(color="cyan")) |
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| | Measuring Renderables |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
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| | Sometimes Rich needs to know how many characters an object will take up when rendering. The :class:`~rich.table.Table` class, for instance, will use this information to calculate the optimal dimensions for the columns. If you aren |
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| | For example, if we are rendering a chess board, it would require a minimum of 8 characters to render. The maximum can be left as the maximum available width (assuming a centered board):: |
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| | class ChessBoard: |
| | def __rich_measure__(self, console: Console, max_width: int) -> Measurement: |
| | return Measurement(8, max_width) |
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