| .. _rich_text: | |
| Rich Text | |
| ========= | |
| Rich has a :class:`~rich.text.Text` class you can use to mark up strings with color and style attributes. You can use a Text instance anywhere a string is accepted, which gives you a lot of control over presentation. | |
| You can consider this class to be like a string with marked up regions of text. Unlike a builtin ``str``, a Text instance is mutable, and most methods operate in-place rather than returning a new instance. | |
| One way to add a style to Text is the :meth:`~rich.text.Text.stylize` method which applies a style to a start and end offset. Here is an example:: | |
| from rich.console import Console | |
| from rich.text import Text | |
| console = Console() | |
| text = Text("Hello, World!") | |
| text.stylize("bold magenta", 0, 6) | |
| console.print(text) | |
| This will print "Hello, World!" to the terminal, with the first word in bold magenta. | |
| Alternatively, you can construct styled text by calling :meth:`~rich.text.Text.append` to add a string and style to the end of the Text. Here's an example:: | |
| text = Text() | |
| text.append("Hello", style="bold magenta") | |
| text.append(" World!") | |
| console.print(text) | |
| Since building Text instances from parts is a common requirement, Rich offers :meth:`~rich.text.Text.assemble` which will combine strings or pairs of string and Style, and return a Text instance. The follow example is equivalent to the code above:: | |
| text = Text.assemble(("Hello", "bold magenta"), " World!") | |
| console.print(text) | |
| You can apply a style to given words in the text with :meth:`~rich.text.Text.highlight_words` or for ultimate control call :meth:`~rich.text.Text.highlight_regex` to highlight text matching a *regular expression*. | |
| Text attributes | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| The Text class has a number of parameters you can set on the constructor to modify how the text is displayed. | |
| - ``justify`` should be "left", "center", "right", or "full", and will override default justify behavior. | |
| - ``overflow`` should be "fold", "crop", or "ellipsis", and will override default overflow. | |
| - ``no_wrap`` prevents wrapping if the text is longer then the available width. | |
| - ``tab_size`` Sets the number of characters in a tab. | |
| A Text instance may be used in place of a plain string virtually everywhere in the Rich API, which gives you a lot of control in how text renders within other Rich renderables. For instance, the following example right aligns text within a :class:`rich.panel.Panel`:: | |
| from rich import print | |
| from rich.panel import Panel | |
| from rich.text import Text | |
| panel = Panel(Text("Hello", justify="right")) | |
| print(panel) | |