I have weird problem that I cannot put my finger on. There is a program that I use (and contribute from time to time) that has colorized console output. Everything worked great until I reinstalled Windows. Now I cannot get colorized output.
This is the script that is used for colorizing.
I have managed to narrow down the problem to, more or less, simple situation, but I have no idea what is wrong.
This is console prompt that works as expected (string test
is printed in red):
Python 2.7.3 (default, Apr 10 2012, 23:24:47) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import sys
>>> sys.path.insert(0, r'c:\bin\SV\tea\src')
>>> from tea.console.color import cprint, Color
>>> cprint('test\n', Color.red)
test
>>>
But when I run following script with same version of python I get output test
but not in red color (there is no color, just default console color):
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, r'c:\bin\SV\tea\src')
from tea.console.color import cprint, Color
cprint('test\n', Color.red)
- The same setup worked before I reinstalled my system.
- I have checked, environment variables in interactive mode and script are the same.
- I have tried this in standard windows command prompt and Console, program that I usually use.
- OS in question is Windows 8 and before reinstall this was also used on Windows 8.
- Same code with same setup works at computer at work (Windows 7).
- I have Python 2.7 and Python 3.3 installed (as I did before). I have tried to run script
with calling python interpreter directly (
c:\Python27\python.exe
) or withpy -2
, but it does not help. - IPython and mercurial colorizes output as it should.
Any ideas what can I try to make this work?
Edit:
Maybe it was not clear, but script I use to colorize output is given in a link in question. Here it is once again: https://bitbucket.org/alefnula/tea/src/dc14009a19d66f92463549332a321b29c71d47b8/src/tea/console/color.py?at=default
tea.console.color
? Is it doing any terminal detection to disable colors when used in the context of a pipe, for example?platform
module? It is entirely possible the platform detection goes wrong somewhere.platform.is_a(platform.WINDOWS | platform.DOTNET)
is executed on my system. Not sure whay platform module was not used, I am not the author, but current code worked and still works on other computers.