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Terminal text colorization with regex-based pattern highlighting and smart nesting

Project description

PipeTint

The only terminal colorizer with smart color nesting and pipeline composition.

CI codecov PyPI version Python versions Production Ready

Python library and CLI tool for terminal text colorization with automatic priority-based color nesting, pipeline composition, and ANSI-aware pattern matching. Zero dependencies, pure Python.


๐Ÿ“– Quick Navigation


โšก Quick Start

# Install
pip install pipetint

# Smart color nesting - inner groups automatically win
echo "hello world" | pipetint '(h.(ll))' red,blue
# Output: "he" is red, "ll" is blue (inner has higher priority)

# Pipeline composition - colors preserved across stages
echo "hello world" | pipetint 'hello' red | pipetint 'world' blue
# Output: "hello" is red, "world" is blue

# Python API with type-safe constants
from pipetint import colored, RED, BLUE, BOLD
print(colored("Error") | RED | BOLD)

Basic Colors


๐ŸŽจ What Makes PipeTint Unique

1. ๐Ÿง  Smart Color Nesting (No other tool has this!)

Automatic priority-based rendering without manual z-index configuration:

# Nested regex groups - inner automatically wins
echo "hello world" | pipetint '(h.(ll))' red,blue
# "he" is red, "ll" is blue (inner group has higher priority)

Nested Groups

Priority Rules:

  1. Pipeline stage - Later commands override earlier ones
  2. Nesting depth - Inner regex groups override outer groups
  3. Application order - Later applications win within same depth

2. ๐Ÿ”— Pipeline Composition

Colors preserved across pipeline stages with intelligent priority:

# Both colors preserved
echo "hello world" | pipetint 'hello' red | pipetint 'world' blue

# Later stage overrides overlaps
echo "hello world" | pipetint 'hello' red | pipetint 'llo w' green
# "he" is red, "llo w" is green (overrides)

Pipeline Demo

3. ๐ŸŽฏ Channel Isolation

Foreground, background, and attributes work independently:

# Background + foreground coexist in same text
echo "hello world" | pipetint '(h.(ll))' bg_red,blue
# "he" = red background only
# "ll" = red background AND blue foreground (both channels!)

Channel Isolation

4. ๐Ÿ” ANSI-Aware Pattern Matching

Patterns match original text, ignoring existing ANSI codes:

# Works on already-colored text!
colored_text = ColorizedString("H\x1b[31mello\x1b[0m World")
result = colored_text.highlight(r'Hello', ['green'])
# Pattern matches "Hello" despite ANSI codes in the middle

๐Ÿ’ก Real-World Examples

Log File Highlighting

from pipetint import ColorizedString

log = "ERROR: Connection failed at 10:30:45"
result = (ColorizedString(log)
    .highlight(r'ERROR', ['red', 'bold'])
    .highlight(r'\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}', ['blue'])
)
print(result)
# "ERROR" is red+bold, timestamp is blue

Multi-Stage Pipeline Processing

# Stage 1: Highlight errors
cat log.txt | pipetint 'ERROR|CRITICAL' red > /tmp/colored.txt

# Stage 2: Add timestamps (higher priority)
cat /tmp/colored.txt | pipetint '\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}' blue
# Both colors preserved, timestamps override errors if overlapping

Syntax Highlighting

code = "def hello_world():"
result = (ColorizedString(code)
    .highlight(r'\b(def)\b', ['blue'])           # Keywords
    .highlight(r'[a-z_]+\w*(?=\()', ['green'])   # Functions
)
print(result)

Complex Styling


๐Ÿš€ Installation

# From PyPI
pip install pipetint

# From source
git clone https://github.com/jim-my/pipetint.git
cd pipetint
pip install -e .

Requirements:

  • Python 3.9+
  • Zero dependencies (pure Python)

โœจ Features

  • ๐Ÿง  Smart Color Nesting: Automatic priority-based rendering without manual z-index
  • ๐Ÿ” ANSI-Aware Matching: Patterns match original text, ignoring color codes
  • ๐ŸŽฏ Channel Isolation: Foreground, background, and attributes work independently
  • ๐Ÿ”— Pipeline Composition: Colors preserved across pipeline stages
  • ๐Ÿ”’ Production Safe: No monkey patching or global state pollution
  • ๐ŸŽญ Multiple APIs: Choose your style - fluent, functional, or global
  • โšก High Performance: Efficient implementation with minimal overhead
  • ๐Ÿงช Well Tested: 143 tests with comprehensive coverage
  • ๐Ÿ“ฆ Zero Dependencies: Pure Python implementation
  • ๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ Cross Platform: Works on Linux, macOS, and Windows

๐Ÿ“‹ Full Documentation

CLI Usage

Basic Usage

# Simple pattern matching
echo "hello world" | pipetint 'l' red

# Pattern groups
echo "hello world" | pipetint '(h.*o).*(w.*d)' red blue

CLI Examples

Advanced: Nested Colors

# Nested regex groups - inner wins
echo "hello world" | pipetint '(h.(ll))' red,blue
# Output: "he" is red, "ll" is blue

# Channel isolation - foreground + background
echo "hello world" | pipetint '(h.(ll))' bg_red,blue
# Output: "he" = red bg, "ll" = red bg + blue fg

# Color name formats (both work)
echo "hello" | pipetint 'hello' bg_red    # Official format
echo "hello" | pipetint 'hello' red_bg    # Natural format (auto-normalized)

Both Formats

CLI Options

# List all available colors
pipetint --list-colors

# Case sensitive matching
echo "Hello World" | pipetint --case-sensitive 'Hello' green

# Verbose mode (debugging)
echo "test" | pipetint --verbose 'test' red

# Clear all previous colors before applying new ones
echo "hello world" | pipetint 'hello' red | pipetint --replace-all 'world' blue
# Result: Only "world" is blue, "hello" has no color

Color Removal & Output Formats

Strip ANSI color codes or convert to different formats:

# Remove all colors (strip ANSI codes)
cat colored.log | pipetint --remove-color > clean.log

# Same using --output-format
cat colored.log | pipetint --output-format=plain > clean.log

# Convert colored output to HTML (with inline styles)
echo "ERROR: Failed" | pipetint 'ERROR' red --output-format=html > output.html

# Pipeline: colorize then strip colors for data processing
cat app.log | pipetint 'ERROR' red | grep ERROR | pipetint --remove-color | wc -l

Use Cases:

  • Extract plain text from colored terminal output
  • Process logs without ANSI codes interfering
  • Convert terminal colors to HTML for web display
  • Clean up output before saving to files

Python Library API

Type-Safe Constants (Recommended)

from pipetint import colored, txt, RED, GREEN, BLUE, YELLOW, BOLD, BG_WHITE, UNDERLINE

# Type-safe constants with operator chaining
print(colored("Success") | GREEN | BOLD)
print(txt("Warning") | YELLOW)
print(colored("Error") | RED | BOLD | BG_WHITE)
print(txt("Info") >> BLUE >> UNDERLINE)

Global Object with Constants

from pipetint import C, RED, BOLD

C.red("hello")              # Direct color method
C("hello") | RED | BOLD     # Factory with type-safe constants
C("hello", "red")           # Direct colorization (legacy)

Pattern Highlighting

from pipetint import ColorizedString

# Highlight search terms
text = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
highlighted = ColorizedString(text).highlight(
    r"(quick)|(fox)|(lazy)",
    ["red", "blue", "green"]
)
print(highlighted)

# Syntax highlighting
code = "def hello_world():"
result = ColorizedString(code).highlight(r"\b(def)\b", ["blue"])
print(result)

Pattern Highlighting

Color Removal

Remove ANSI color codes from text:

from pipetint import Colorize, ColorizedString

# Method 1: Using Colorize
colorizer = Colorize()
colored_text = "\033[31mERROR\033[0m: Connection failed"
clean_text = colorizer.remove_color(colored_text)
print(clean_text)  # "ERROR: Connection failed"

# Method 2: Using ColorizedString
cs = ColorizedString("\033[31mERROR\033[0m: Connection failed")
clean = cs.remove_color()
print(str(clean))  # "ERROR: Connection failed"

# Useful for processing colored output
log_line = ColorizedString("...").highlight(r'ERROR', ['red'])
# Later, extract plain text for analysis
plain_text = str(log_line.remove_color())

Available Colors and Styles

Foreground Colors

red, green, blue, yellow, magenta, cyan, white, black, lightred, lightgreen, lightblue, lightyellow, lightmagenta, lightcyan, lightgray, darkgray

Background Colors

bg_red, bg_green, bg_blue, bg_yellow, bg_magenta, bg_cyan, bg_white, bg_black, bg_lightred, bg_lightgreen, bg_lightblue, bg_lightyellow, bg_lightmagenta, bg_lightcyan, bg_lightgray, bg_darkgray

Text Styles

bright/bold, dim, underline, blink, invert/swapcolor, hidden, strikethrough

Type-Safe Color Constants

Use constants instead of error-prone string literals:

from pipetint import colored, RED, GREEN, BLUE, YELLOW, BOLD, BG_WHITE

# โœ… Type-safe with IDE autocompletion and error checking
error_msg = colored("CRITICAL") | RED | BOLD | BG_WHITE
success_msg = colored("SUCCESS") | GREEN | BOLD
warning_msg = colored("WARNING") | YELLOW

# โŒ Error-prone string literals
error_msg = colored("CRITICAL") | "red" | "typo"  # Runtime error!

Benefits:

  • ๐Ÿ” IDE Autocompletion: Get suggestions for valid colors
  • ๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Type Checking: Catch typos at development time
  • ๐Ÿ“ Self-Documenting: Clear, readable code
  • ๐Ÿ”„ Refactoring Safe: Rename constants across codebase
  • โšก No Runtime Errors: Invalid colors caught early

๐ŸŽจ Advanced: Color Nesting & Priority

Nested Regex Groups

Inner (more specific) capture groups automatically override outer ones:

from pipetint import ColorizedString

text = ColorizedString("hello world")

# Pattern: (h.(ll)) creates two groups
# - Group 1: "hell" (outer) โ†’ red
# - Group 2: "ll" (inner, higher priority) โ†’ blue
result = text.highlight(r'(h.(ll))', ['red', 'blue'])
print(result)
# Output: "he" is red, "ll" is blue (inner wins)

Priority Rules:

  1. Pipeline stage: Later commands override earlier ones
  2. Nesting depth: Inner regex groups override outer groups
  3. Application order: Later applications win within same depth

Channel Isolation

Foreground, background, and attributes are independent channels that can coexist:

text = ColorizedString("hello world")

# Background and foreground don't conflict!
result = text.highlight(r'(h.(ll))', ['bg_red', 'blue'])
print(result)
# Output: "he" has red background
#         "ll" has BOTH red background AND blue foreground

Available Channels:

  • Foreground (fg): Text color (red, blue, green, etc.)
  • Background (bg): Background color (bg_red, bg_blue, etc.)
  • Attributes (attr): Bold, underline, dim, etc.

ANSI-Aware Pattern Matching

Patterns always match the original text, even if it contains ANSI codes:

# Text with existing ANSI codes
colored_text = ColorizedString("H\x1b[31mello\x1b[0m World")

# Pattern still matches "Hello" ignoring the ANSI codes in between
result = colored_text.highlight(r'Hello', ['green'])
print(result)
# Works! Pattern matched the original text "Hello World"

Color Name Flexibility

Both bg_red and red_bg formats are supported:

# These are equivalent:
text.highlight(r'hello', ['bg_red'])    # Official format
text.highlight(r'hello', ['red_bg'])    # Natural format (auto-normalized)

๐Ÿงช Development

Running Tests

# Run all tests
pytest

# Run with coverage
pytest --cov=pipetint

# Run specific test file
pytest tests/test_nesting.py

Code Quality

# Format and lint
ruff format --preview .
ruff check --preview .

# Type checking
mypy src/

# Run pre-commit hooks
pre-commit run --all-files

๐Ÿ“– Examples

See the examples/ directory for more comprehensive examples:

  • examples/quickstart.py - Basic usage patterns
  • examples/enhanced_demo.py - Full enhanced API demonstration
  • examples/nesting_demo.py - Color nesting and priority examples

๐Ÿค Contributing

Contributions are welcome! See CONTRIBUTING.md for guidelines.

Quick Start:

  1. Fork the repository
  2. Create a feature branch: git checkout -b feature/amazing-feature
  3. Make your changes and add tests
  4. Run tests and pre-commit hooks: pytest && pre-commit run --all-files
  5. Commit your changes: git commit -m "feat: add amazing feature"
  6. Push and create a Pull Request

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Roadmap

See ROADMAP.md for planned features and future direction.

Upcoming features:

  • Configuration file support (.pipetintrc.yaml)
  • Built-in color themes (log-levels, git-diff, python)
  • TrueColor (24-bit RGB) support
  • Pygments integration for syntax highlighting

๐Ÿ“„ License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.


๐Ÿ™ Acknowledgments

  • Inspired by the Ruby colorize gem
  • Built with modern Python best practices
  • Designed for production safety and developer experience

๐Ÿ”„ Legacy API (Still Supported)

The original API remains fully supported for backward compatibility:

from pipetint import Colorize, ColorizedString

# Original Colorize class
colorizer = Colorize()
print(colorizer.colorize("hello", "red"))

# Original ColorizedString
cs = ColorizedString("hello")
print(cs.colorize("blue"))

๐Ÿ“Š Version Management

This project uses automated versioning via git tags:

  • Versions are managed by setuptools-scm based on git tags
  • poetry-dynamic-versioning integrates this with Poetry builds
  • To release: git tag v1.2.3 && git push --tags

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