NAME
ansifold/ansicolrm/ansicut - fold/colrm/cut command handling ANSI terminal sequences
SYNOPSIS
ansifold [ options ]
-w# --width=# Folding width (default 72)
--boundary=word|space Fold on word boundary
--padding[=#] Padding to margin space
--padchar=_ Default padding character
--prefix=string Set prefix string (default empty)
--autoindent=pattern Set auto-indent pattern
--ambiguous=narrow|wide Unicode ambiguous character handling
-p --paragraph Print extra newline
-r --refill Join paragraph into single line first
--separate=string Set the output separator string (default newline)
-n --nonewline Same as --separate ''
--lb=# --linebreak=mode Line-break mode (all, runin, runout, none)
--runin=# Run-in width (default 4)
--runout=# Run-out width (default 4)
--runlen=# Set run-in and run-out both
-s --smart Same as --boundary=word --linebreak=all
-x[#] --expand[=#] Expand tabs
--tabstop=n Tab-stop position (default 8)
--tabhead=char Tab-head character (default space)
--tabspace=char Tab-space character (default space)
--tabstyle=style Tab expansion style (shade, dot, symbol)
--colrm start [ end ] colrm(1) command compatible
-c# --cut list cut(1) command compatible
-h --help Show help message
-v --version Show version
ansicolrm [ options ]
ansicut -c list
VERSION
Version 1.28
DESCRIPTION
ansifold is a fold(1) compatible command utilizing Text::ANSI::Fold module, which enables to handle ANSI terminal sequences.
ansicolrm works like colrm(1) command. This is an alias for ansifold command and works exactly same except option --colrm is enabled by default.
ansicut works like cut(1) command. This is an alias for ansifold command and works exactly same except default output separator string is set as empty by default. Support only -c (or --cut) option of the original cut(1) command.
FOLD BY WIDTH
ansifold folds lines in 72 column by default. Use option -w to change the folding width.
$ ansifold -w132
Single field is used repeatedly for the same line.
With option --padding, remained columns are filled by padding character, space by default, or specified by optional value like --padding=_
. Default padding character can be set by --padchar option.
ansifold handles Unicode multi-byte characters properly. Option --ambiguous takes wide or narrow and it specifies the visual width of Unicode ambiguous characters.
TERMINAL WIDTH and CALCULATION
If the width argument begins with =
, it is interpreted as an RPN (Reverse Polish Notation) expression with the terminal width as the initial value. Therefore,
ansifold -w=
will wrap at the width of the terminal, and
ansifold -w=2/
will wrap at half the width of the terminal.
MULTIPLE WIDTH
Unlike the original fold(1) command, multiple numbers can be specified.
$ LANG=C date | ansifold -w 3,1,3,1,2 | cat -n
1 Wed
2
3 Dec
4
5 19
With multiple fields, unmatched part is discarded as in the above example. So you can truncate lines by putting comma at the end of single field.
ansifold -w80,
Option -w80,
is equivalent to -w80,0
. Zero width is ignored when seen as a final number, but not ignored otherwise.
NEGATIVE WIDTH
Negative number fields are discarded.
$ LANG=C date | ansifold -w 3,-1,3,-1,2
Wed
Dec
19
If the final width is negative, it is not discarded but takes all the rest instead. So next commands do the same thing.
$ colrm 7 10
$ ansifold -nw 6,-4,-1
Option --width -1
does nothing effectively. Using it with --expand option implements ANSI/Unicode aware expand(1) command.
$ ansifold --expand --width -1
This can be written as this.
$ ansifold -xw-1
NUMBERS
Number description is handled by Getopt::EX::Numbers module, and consists of start
, end
, step
and length
elements. For example,
$ echo AABBBBCCCCCCDDDDDDDDEEEEEEEEEE | ansifold -w 2:10:2
is equivalent to:
$ echo AABBBBCCCCCCDDDDDDDDEEEEEEEEEE | ansifold -w 2,4,6,8,10
and produces output like this:
AA
BBBB
CCCCCC
DDDDDDDD
EEEEEEEEEE
SEPARATOR/TERMINATOR
Option -n eliminates newlines between columns.
$ LANG=C date | ansifold -w 3,-1,3,-1,2 -n
WedDec19
Option --separate set the output separator string.
$ echo ABCDEF | ansifold --separate=: -w 1,0,1,0,1,-1
A::B::C:DEF
Option -n is a short-cut for --separate ''
.
Option --paragraph (or -p) print extra newline after each line. This is convenient when a paragraph is made up of single line, like microsoft word document. The -p option can be repeated multiple times and will output that many newline characters.
PREFIX
--prefix=string
If a string is given by --prefix option, that string is inserted at the beginning of each folded text. This is convenient to produce indented text block. Because the first line is not affected, insert appropiate prefix if necessary. Originally made for App::Greple::frame module.
--autoindent=pattern
An experimental --autoindent option takes a regex pattern for the indent label, and set the prefix string as a space string of that label length. For example, command ps auxgw
produce very long line output and you may want to fold COMMAND
portion with appropiate indentation. In this case use --autoindent option like this:
$ ps axgw | ansifold --autoindent '.*TIME (?=COMMAND)' -w= --boundary=word
PID TT STAT TIME COMMAND
1 ?? Ss 817:25.87 /sbin/launchd
354 ?? S 4:30.01 /System/Applications/TextEdit.app/Contents/
MacOS/TextEdit
522 ?? Ss 2:50.67 /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Uninstall.
framework/Resources/uninstalld
REFILL
Option --refill (or -r) makes the command to run in paragraph mode, which read consecutive non-blank lines at once, and join them into single line before processing. So all paragraphs are reformatted by new text width. You can use this with --autoindent option.
Option -rw-1 will just fill paragraphs without reformatting.
LINE BREAKING
Line break adjustment is supported for ASCII word boundaries. As for Japanese, more complicated prohibition processing is performed. Use option -s to enable everything.
--boundary=word|space
This option prohibit breaking line in the middle of ASCII/Latin word. Context of word is defined by option value; word means alpha-numeric sequence, while space means simply non-space printables.
--linebreak=all|runin|runout|none, --lb=...
Option --linebreak takes a value of all, runin, runout or none. Default value is none.
When --linebreak option is enabled, if the cut-off text start with space or prohibited characters (e.g. closing parenthesis), they are ran-in at the end of current line as much as possible.
If the trimmed text end with prohibited characters (e.g. opening parenthesis), they are ran-out to the head of next line, provided it fits to maximum width.
--runin=width, --runout=width
--runlen=width
Maximum width of run-in/run-out characters are defined by --runin and --runout option. Default values are 4.
Option --runlen set both run-in/run-out width at once.
--smart, -s
Option --smart (or simply -s) set both --boundary=word and --linebreak=all, and enables all smart text formatting capability.
Use option --boundary=space if you want the command to behave more like -s option of fold(1) command.
TAB EXPANSION
--expand
Option --expand (or -x) enables tab character expansion.
$ ansifold --expand
Takes optional number for tabstop and it precedes to --tabstop option.
$ ansifold -x4w-1
If the command is executed with the name ansiexpand
, it works as if the --expand option were given, and set default folding width to -1. App::ansiexpand is a bit more sophisticated and we recommend using that one rather.
--tabhead, --tabspace
Each tab character is converted to tabhead and following tabspace characters (both are space by default). They can be specified by --tabhead and --tabspace option. If the option value is longer than single characger, it is evaluated as unicode name. Next example makes tab character visible keeping text layout.
$ ansifold --expand --tabhead="MEDIUM SHADE" --tabspace="LIGHT SHADE"
--tabstyle
Option --tabstyle allow to set --tabhead and --tabspace characters at once according to the given style name. Select from dot
, symbol
or shade
. Styles are defined in Text::ANSI::Fold library.
$ ansifold --expand --tabstyle=shade
COLRM COMPATIBLE
--colrm [ start [ end ] ... ]
Option --colrm takes colrm(1) command compatible arguments.
Since the output separator string is not set, use the -n option to get the same result as the colrm(1) command; when invoked as ansicolrm command, the separator string is set to the empty by default.
Next command behave exactly like colrm start end
and takes care of ANSI terminal sequences.
$ ansifold -n --colrm start end
$ ansicolrm start end
Unlike standard colrm(1), start and end can be repeated as many times as desired. Next command removes column 1-3 and 7-9 and produces 4560
as a result.
$ echo 1234567890 | ansifold -n --colrm 1 3 7 9
^^^ ^^^
CUT COMPATIBLE
--cut list ...
-c list ...
Option --cut (or -c) takes cut(1) command compatible arguments.
Since the output separator string is not set, use the -n option to get the same result as the cut(1) command; when invoked as ansicut command, the separator string is set to the empty by default.
Next command behave exactly like cut -c list
and takes care of ANSI terminal sequences.
$ ansifold -n -c list ...
$ ansicut -c list ...
Next command retrieve column 4-6,9- and produces 45690
as a result.
$ echo 1234567890 | ansifold -nc 4-6,9-
^^^ ^^
Unlike cut(1)'s -c option, parameter number is taken as screen columns of the terminal, rather than number of logical characters.
BUGS
Option --refill will join Hangul string without space. Probably this is not a correct behavior.
FILES
- ~/.ansifoldrc
-
Start-up file. See Getopt::EX::Module for format.
INSTALL
CPANMINUS
$ cpanm App::ansifold
SEE ALSO
https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/ Requirements for Japanese Text Layout, W3C Working Group Note 11 August 2020
AUTHOR
Kazumasa Utashiro
LICENSE
Copyright ©︎ 2018-2024 Kazumasa Utashiro
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.