A simple logging package that helps you log colorized messages in Windows console.
Project description
log21
A simple logging package that helps you log colorized messages in Windows console and other operating systems.
Features
- Colors : The main reason for this package was to log text in the Windows console with the support of ANSI colors.
- Argument parsing : log21's argument parser can be used like python's argparse but it also colorizes the output.
- Logging : A similar logger to logging. Logger but with colorized output and other options such as levelname modifications. It can also decolorize the output if you want to log into a file.
- Pretty printing : Have you ever wanted to colorize the output of the pprint module? log21's pretty printer can do that.
- Tree printing : You can pass a dict or list to
log21.tree_print
function and it will print it in a tree-like structure. It's also colorized XD. - ProgressBar : log21's progress bar can be used to show progress of a process in a beautiful way.
- LoggingWindow : Helps you to log messages and debug your code in a window other than the console.
- CrashReporter : log21's crash reporter can be used to report crashes in different ways. You can use it to log crashes to console or files or use it to receive crash reports of your program through email. And you can also define your own crash reporter functions and use them instead!
- Argumentify : You can use the argumentify feature to decrease the number of lines you need to write to parse command-line arguments. It's colored by the way!
- Any idea? Feel free to open an issue or submit a pull request.
Installation
Well, this is a python package so the first thing you need is python.
If you don't have python installed, please visit Python.org and install the latest version of python.
Then you can install log21 using pip module:
python -m pip install log21 -U
Or you can clone the repository and run:
pip install .
Or let the pip get it using git:
pip install git+https://github.com/MPCodeWriter21/log21
Changes
2.8.1b0
- Fixed setting level using
log21.basic_config
Usage Examples:
Basic Logging
import log21
log21.print(log21.get_color('#FF0000') + 'This' + log21.get_color((0, 255, 0)) + ' is' + log21.get_color('Blue') +
' Blue' + log21.get_colors('BackgroundWhite', 'Black') + ' 8)')
logger = log21.get_logger('My Logger', level_names={21: 'SpecialInfo', log21.WARNING: ' ! ', log21.ERROR: '!!!'})
logger.info('You are reading the README.md file...')
logger.log(21, 'Here', '%s', 'GO!', args=('we',))
logger.setLevel(log21.WARNING)
logger.warning("We can't log messages with a level less than 30 anymore!")
logger.debug("You won't see this!")
logger.info("Am I visible?")
logger.error(log21.get_colors('LightRed') + "I'm still here ;1")
Argument Parsing (See Also: Argumentify)
import log21
from log21 import ColorizingArgumentParser, get_logger, get_colors as gc
parser = ColorizingArgumentParser(description="This is a simple example of a ColorizingArgumentParser.",
colors={'help': 'LightCyan'})
parser.add_argument('test1', action='store', help='Test 1')
parser.add_argument('test2', action='store', help='Test 2')
parser.add_argument('--optional-arg', '-o', action='store', type=int, help='An optional integer')
parser.add_argument('--verbose', '-v', action='store_true', help='Increase verbosity.')
args = parser.parse_args()
logger = get_logger('My Logger', level_names={log21.DEBUG: ' ? ', log21.INFO: ' + ', log21.WARNING: ' ! ',
log21.ERROR: '!!!'})
if args.verbose:
logger.setLevel(log21.DEBUG)
else:
logger.setLevel(log21.INFO)
logger.debug(gc('LightBlue') + 'Verbose mode on!')
logger.debug('Arguments:\n'
'\tTest 1: %s\n'
'\tTest 2: %s\n'
'\tOptional: %s', args=(args.test1, args.test2, args.optional_arg))
logger.info(gc('LightGreen') + args.test1)
logger.info(gc('LightWhite') + 'Done!')
Pretty-Printing and Tree-Printing
import json
import log21
data = json.load(open('json.json', 'r'))
# Prints data using python's built-in print function
print(data)
# Uses `log21.pprint` to print the data
log21.pprint(data)
# Uses `log21.tree_print` to print the data
log21.tree_print(data)
Logging Window
import log21
window = log21.get_logging_window('My Logging Window', width=80)
window.font = ('Courier New', 9)
# Basic logging
window.info('This is a basic logging message.')
# Using ANSI and HEX colors
# List of ANSI colors: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Colors
# ANSI color format: \033[<attribute>m
window.info('\033[91mThis is RED message.')
window.info('\033[102mThis is message with GREEN background.')
# HEX color format: \033#<HEX-COLOR>hf (where f represents the foreground color) and
# \033#<HEX-COLOR>hb (where b represents the background color)
window.info('\x1b#009900hbThis is a text with GREEN background.')
window.info('\033#0000FFhf\033[103mThis is message with BLUE foreground and YELLOW background.')
import random, string
# And here is a text with random colors
text = 'I have random colors XD'
colored_text = ''
for character in text:
color = '\033#' + ''.join(random.choice(string.hexdigits) for _ in range(6)) + 'hf'
colored_text += color + character
window.error(colored_text)
# See more examples in
# https://github.com/MPCodeWriter21/log21/blob/066efc1e72542531012d36974bbf6cd4c5941378/log21/LoggingWindow.py#L155
# and
# https://github.com/MPCodeWriter21/log21/blob/066efc1e72542531012d36974bbf6cd4c5941378/log21/__init__.py#L144
ProgressBar
# Example 1
import log21, time
# Define a very simple log21 progress bar
progress_bar = log21.ProgressBar()
# And here is a simple loop that will print the progress bar
for i in range(100):
progress_bar(i + 1, 100)
time.sleep(0.08)
# Example 2
import time, random
from log21 import ProgressBar, get_colors as gc
# Let's customize the progress bar a little bit this time
progress_bar = ProgressBar(
width=50,
fill='#',
empty='-',
prefix='[',
suffix=']',
colors={'progress in-progress': gc('Bright Red'), 'progress complete': gc('Bright Cyan'),
'percentage in-progress': gc('Green'), 'percentage complete': gc('Bright Cyan'),
'prefix-color in-progress': gc('Bright White'), 'prefix-color complete': gc('Bright White'),
'prefix-color failed': gc('Bright White'), 'suffix-color in-progress': gc('Bright White'),
'suffix-color complete': gc('Bright White'), 'suffix-color failed': gc('Bright White')})
for i in range(84):
progress_bar(i + 1, 84)
time.sleep(random.uniform(0.05, 0.21))
Argumentify (Check out the manual way)
# Common Section
import log21
class ReversedText:
def __init__(self, text: str):
self._text = text[::-1]
def __str__(self):
return self._text
def __repr__(self):
return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}(text='{self._text}') at {hex(id(self))}>"
# Old way
def main():
"""Here is my main function"""
parser = log21.ColorizingArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--positional-arg', '-p', action='store', type=int,
required=True, help="This argument is positional!")
parser.add_argument('--optional-arg', '-o', action='store', type=ReversedText,
help="Whatever you pass here will be REVERSED!")
parser.add_argument('--arg-with-default', '-a', action='store', default=21,
help="The default value is 21")
parser.add_argument('--additional-arg', '-A', action='store',
help="This one is extra.")
parser.add_argument('--verbose', '-v', action='store_true',
help="Increase verbosity")
args = parser.parse_args()
if args.verbose:
log21.basic_config(level='DEBUG')
log21.info(f"positional_arg = {args.positional_arg}")
log21.info(f"optional_arg = {args.optional_arg}")
log21.debug(f"arg_with_default = {args.arg_with_default}")
log21.debug(f"additional_arg = {args.additional_arg}")
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
# New way
def main(positional_arg: int, /, optional_arg: ReversedText, arg_with_default: int = 21,
additional_arg=None, verbose: bool = False):
"""Some description
:param positional_arg: This argument is positional!
:param optional_arg: Whatever you pass here will be REVERSED!
:param arg_with_default: The default value is 21
:param additional_arg: This one is extra.
:param verbose: Increase verbosity
"""
if verbose:
log21.basic_config(level='DEBUG')
log21.info(f"{positional_arg = }")
log21.info(f"{optional_arg = !s}")
log21.debug(f"{arg_with_default = }")
log21.debug(f"{additional_arg = !s}")
if __name__ == '__main__':
log21.argumentify(main)
Example with multiple functions as entry-point:
import ast
import operator
from functools import reduce
import log21
# `safe_eval` Based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/9558001/1113207
# Supported Operators
operators = {
ast.Add: operator.add,
ast.Sub: operator.sub,
ast.Mult: operator.mul,
ast.Div: operator.truediv,
ast.FloorDiv: operator.floordiv,
ast.Pow: operator.pow,
ast.BitXor: operator.xor,
ast.USub: operator.neg
}
def safe_eval(expr: str):
"""Safely evaluate a mathematical expression.
>>> eval_expr('2^6')
4
>>> eval_expr('2**6')
64
>>> eval_expr('1 + 2*3**(4^5) / (6 + -7)')
-5.0
:param expr: expression to evaluate
:raises SyntaxError: on invalid expression
:return: result of the evaluation
"""
try:
return _eval(ast.parse(expr, mode='eval').body)
except (TypeError, KeyError, SyntaxError):
log21.error(f'Invalid expression: {expr}')
raise
def _eval(node: ast.AST):
"""Internal implementation of `safe_eval`.
:param node: AST node to evaluate
:raises TypeError: on invalid node
:raises KeyError: on invalid operator
:raises ZeroDivisionError: on division by zero
:raises ValueError: on invalid literal
:raises SyntaxError: on invalid syntax
:return: result of the evaluation
"""
if isinstance(node, ast.Num): # <number>
return node.n
if isinstance(node, ast.BinOp): # <left> <operator> <right>
return operators[type(node.op)](_eval(node.left), _eval(node.right))
if isinstance(node, ast.UnaryOp): # <operator> <operand> e.g., -1
return operators[type(node.op)](_eval(node.operand))
raise TypeError(node)
# Example code
def addition(*numbers: float):
"""Addition of numbers.
Args:
numbers (float): numbers to add
"""
if len(numbers) < 2:
log21.error('At least two numbers are required! Use `-n`.')
return
log21.info(f'Result: {sum(numbers)}')
def multiplication(*numbers: float):
"""Multiplication of numbers.
Args:
numbers (float): numbers to multiply
"""
if len(numbers) < 2:
log21.error('At least two numbers are required! Use `-n`.')
return
log21.info(f'Result: {reduce(lambda x, y: x * y, numbers)}')
def calc(*inputs: str, verbose: bool = False):
"""Calculate numbers.
:param inputs: numbers and operators
"""
expression = ' '.join(inputs)
if len(expression) < 3:
log21.error('At least two numbers and one operator are required! Use `-i`.')
return
if verbose:
log21.basic_config(level='DEBUG')
log21.debug(f'Expression: {expression}')
try:
log21.info(f'Result: {safe_eval(expression)}')
except (TypeError, KeyError, SyntaxError):
pass
if __name__ == "__main__":
log21.argumentify({'add': addition, 'mul': multiplication, 'calc': calc})
About
Author: CodeWriter21 (Mehrad Pooryoussof)
GitHub: MPCodeWriter21
Telegram Channel: @CodeWriter21
Aparat Channel: CodeWriter21
License
Donate
In order to support this project you can donate some crypto of your choice 8D
Or if you can't, give this project a star on GitHub :)
References
- ANSI Color Codes ( Wikipedia): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code
Project details
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