NAME

File::LsColor - Colorize input filenames just like ls does

SYNOPSIS

use File::LsColor qw(:all);
# Is equal to:
use File::LsColor qw(
  ls_color
  ls_color_custom
  ls_color_default
  ls_color_internal
  get_ls_colors
  can_ls_color
  ls_color_lookup
  parse_ls_colors
);


my @files = glob("$ENV{HOME}/*");

print "$_\n" for ls_color @files;

# or specify own pattern

@files = ls_color_custom('*.pl=38;5;196;1:*.pm=38;5;220', @files);

# or use the internal mappings

@files = ls_color_internal(@files);

# or use the defaults (only ANSI colors)

@files = ls_color_default(@files);


# returns a hashref with all defined filetypes and their attributes
my $ls_colors = get_ls_colors();

# what's the defined attributes for directories?

my $dir_color = can_ls_color('di');

# can we apply attributes to this filetype?
my $filetype = shift;
printf "%s can be colored.\n" if can_ls_color($filetype);

# apply terminal color even if we can't use LS_COLORS to do so.
my $file_with_extension = 'foobar.flac';
printf "%s looks nice.\n", can_ls_color($file_with_extension)
  ? ls_color($file_with_extension)
  : Term::ExtendedColor::fg(32, $file_with_extension);

DESCRIPTION

This module provides functionality for using the LS_COLORS variable for colorizing output in a way that's immediately recognized.

Say that you have a list of filenames that's the result of some complex operation, and you wish to present the result to the user.

If said files have an extension and that extension is present in the users LS_COLORS variable, they will be colored just like they would have been if the filenames were output from ls(1) or tree(1).

EXPORTS

None by default.

FUNCTIONS

ls_color()

Arguments: @files | \@files

Returns: @files | @files

Returns a list of filenames colored as specified by the environment LS_COLORS variable. If the LS_COLORS variable is not set, use the default gnu specification.

In scalar context a string joined by '' is returned.

ls_color_default()

The same thing as ls_color(), but uses the default LS_COLORS values from GNU ls. Those are only ANSI colors.

ls_color_internal()

The same as ls_color(), with one minor difference; Instead of using the LS_COLORS variable from the environment, an internal specification is used. This specification contains about 250 extensions as of this writing.

ls_color_custom()

The first argument to ls_color_custom() should be a valid LS_COLORS definition, like so:

ls_color_custom("*.pl=38;5;196:*.pm=38;5;197;1", @perl_files);

get_ls_colors()

Returns a hash reference where a key is the extension and its value is the attributes attached to it.

can_ls_color()

Arguments: $file Returns: $attributes

Given a valid name, returns the defined attributes associated with it. Else, returns undef.

ls_color_lookup()

The same as can_ls_color(), exportable because of compatibility reasons.

parse_ls_colors() Arguments: $string Returns: \%hash

Returns a hashref with extension => attribute mappings, i.e:

'7z'  => '01;31',
'aac' => '00;36',
'ace' => '01;31',
'anx' => '01;35',
'arj' => '01;31',

NOTES

If the internal $NO_STAT variable is set, no stat call wil be made on the input filenames. This can be desired if the filenames aren't real files, or for performance reasons.

AUTHOR

Magnus Woldrich
CPAN ID: WOLDRICH
m@japh.se
http://japh.se
https://github.com/trapd00r

REPORTING BUGS

Report bugs on https://github.com/trapd00r/File-LsColor or to m@japh.se

CONTRIBUTORS

None required yet.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2011, 2018, 2019- the File::LsColor "AUTHOR" and "CONTRIBUTORS" as listed above.

LICENSE

This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.