3190

How do I output colored text to the terminal in Python?

4
  • 1
    This symbol would make a great colored block: Only problem is that it is extended ASCII, maybe you could get it to work using http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8465226/using-extended-ascii-codes-with-python Oct 5, 2013 at 16:14
  • 1
    Some terminals also can display Unicode characters. If that is true for your terminal, the possible characters are almost unlimited.
    – ayke
    Nov 19, 2013 at 20:02
  • pip install python-colored-print colored-print Jan 10 at 16:19
  • You can use ANSI escape codes to output colored text to the terminal in Python.
    – Akbari
    Jan 11 at 23:01

65 Answers 65

2870

This somewhat depends on what platform you are on. The most common way to do this is by printing ANSI escape sequences. For a simple example, here's some Python code from the Blender build scripts:

class bcolors:
    HEADER = '\033[95m'
    OKBLUE = '\033[94m'
    OKCYAN = '\033[96m'
    OKGREEN = '\033[92m'
    WARNING = '\033[93m'
    FAIL = '\033[91m'
    ENDC = '\033[0m'
    BOLD = '\033[1m'
    UNDERLINE = '\033[4m'

To use code like this, you can do something like:

print(bcolors.WARNING + "Warning: No active frommets remain. Continue?" + bcolors.ENDC)

Or, with Python 3.6+:

print(f"{bcolors.WARNING}Warning: No active frommets remain. Continue?{bcolors.ENDC}")

This will work on unixes including OS X, Linux and Windows (provided you use ANSICON, or in Windows 10 provided you enable VT100 emulation). There are ANSI codes for setting the color, moving the cursor, and more.

If you are going to get complicated with this (and it sounds like you are if you are writing a game), you should look into the "curses" module, which handles a lot of the complicated parts of this for you. The Python Curses HowTO is a good introduction.

If you are not using extended ASCII (i.e., not on a PC), you are stuck with the ASCII characters below 127, and '#' or '@' is probably your best bet for a block. If you can ensure your terminal is using a IBM extended ASCII character set, you have many more options. Characters 176, 177, 178 and 219 are the "block characters".

Some modern text-based programs, such as "Dwarf Fortress", emulate text mode in a graphical mode, and use images of the classic PC font. You can find some of these bitmaps that you can use on the Dwarf Fortress Wiki see (user-made tilesets).

The Text Mode Demo Contest has more resources for doing graphics in text mode.

22
  • 14
    On Linux, you might want to use tput, like so since it results in more portable code. Nov 3, 2012 at 11:04
  • 4
    @Cawas: A real use case for disable is when you pipe the output to a file; while tools like cat may support colors, it is generally better to not print color information to files. Apr 9, 2014 at 6:27
  • 10
    @AlexanderSimko, here's a ctypes code snippet to enable VT100 support in Windows 10: import ctypes; kernel32 = ctypes.WinDLL('kernel32'); hStdOut = kernel32.GetStdHandle(-11); mode = ctypes.c_ulong(); kernel32.GetConsoleMode(hStdOut, ctypes.byref(mode)); mode.value |= 4; kernel32.SetConsoleMode(hStdOut, mode).
    – Eryk Sun
    Sep 1, 2016 at 23:38
  • 9
    To anyone using the Python example code from the answer: It should be noted that the colors in the range 90-97 and 100-107 are non-standard and, indeed, on my terminal they don't all give the colors indicated by the variable names. It's better to use the standard ranges 30-37 and 40-47. Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
    – balu
    Oct 8, 2017 at 9:27
  • 5
    On windows, you can make ansi escape codes work by running the color command in cmd. Just put in os.system("color")
    – crxyz
    Jul 16, 2021 at 13:06
1176

There is also the Python termcolor module. Usage is pretty simple:

from termcolor import colored

print colored('hello', 'red'), colored('world', 'green')

Or in Python 3:

print(colored('hello', 'red'), colored('world', 'green'))

It may not be sophisticated enough, however, for game programming and the "colored blocks" that you want to do...

To get the ANSI codes working on windows, first run

os.system('color')
15
  • 5
    Since it's emitting ANSI codes, does it work on Windows (DOS consoles) if ansi.sys is loaded? support.microsoft.com/kb/101875
    – Phil P
    Jul 29, 2011 at 4:16
  • 46
    Just noticed that as of 13/01/2011, it's now under MIT license Oct 28, 2011 at 2:19
  • 9
    termcolor.COLORS gives you a list of colours
    – akxlr
    Nov 14, 2015 at 2:05
  • 2
    Hey Samat! Would it be nice to mention that you can still use .format() for adding variables to the printed string, like this: print(colored('{0}', 'red').format(var_with_msg)). Nice solution! Tks
    – ivanleoncz
    Oct 16, 2018 at 22:50
  • 72
    On Windows run os.system('color') first, then the ANSI escape sequences start working.
    – Szabolcs
    Dec 12, 2018 at 16:53
1071

The answer is Colorama for all cross-platform coloring in Python.

It supports Python 3.5+ as well as Python 2.7.

And as of January 2023, it is maintained.

Example Code:

from colorama import init as colorama_init
from colorama import Fore
from colorama import Style

colorama_init()

print(f"This is {Fore.GREEN}color{Style.RESET_ALL}!")

Example Screenshot: example screenshot

19
  • 498
    As the author of Colorama, thanks for the mention @nbv4. I'll try and clarify a bit: Colorama aims to let Python programs print colored terminal text on all platforms, using the same ANSI codes as described in many other answers on this page. On Windows, Colorama strips these ANSI characters from stdout and converts them into equivalent win32 calls for colored text. On other platforms, Colorama does nothing. Hence you can use ANSI codes, or modules like Termcolor, and with Colorama, they 'just work' on all platforms. Is that idea, anyhow. Sep 13, 2010 at 13:22
  • 7
    @Jonathan, This is truly an awesome library! The ability to cross platform color Python output is really really nice and useful. I am providing tools for a library that colors its own console. I can redirect the output of that console to the terminal and colorize the output. Now I can even one up the library and let the user select colors. This will allow color blind people to set things to work so they can actually see the output correctly. Thanks
    – Demolishun
    Nov 30, 2012 at 13:05
  • 95
    This should be in the standard library... Cross platform colour support is important, I think.
    – daviewales
    Jun 28, 2013 at 14:08
  • 15
    Colorama is great! Also have a look at ansimarkup, which is built on colorama and allows you to use a simple tag-based markup (e.g. <b>bold</b>) for adding style to terminal text
    – gvalkov
    Feb 19, 2017 at 17:07
  • 73
    This doesn't work without calling colorama.init(). Vote up! Feb 19, 2018 at 3:32
676

Print a string that starts a color/style, then the string, and then end the color/style change with '\x1b[0m':

print('\x1b[6;30;42m' + 'Success!' + '\x1b[0m')

Success with green background example

Get a table of format options for shell text with the following code:

def print_format_table():
    """
    prints table of formatted text format options
    """
    for style in range(8):
        for fg in range(30,38):
            s1 = ''
            for bg in range(40,48):
                format = ';'.join([str(style), str(fg), str(bg)])
                s1 += '\x1b[%sm %s \x1b[0m' % (format, format)
            print(s1)
        print('\n')

print_format_table()

Light-on-dark example (complete)

Enter image description here

Dark-on-light example (partial)

Top part of output

Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Colors

9
  • 14
    this works in most shells as well as ipython, good enough for most applications
    – dashesy
    Feb 18, 2014 at 6:13
  • 4
    can I ask, which terminal is this?
    – FlipTack
    Dec 3, 2016 at 17:53
  • 4
    how portable is it? Jan 11, 2017 at 21:17
  • 3
    Short standalone implementation: gist.github.com/Sheljohn/68ca3be74139f66dbc6127784f638920
    – Jonathan H
    Mar 7, 2017 at 15:34
  • 2
    To make this work in Windows 10 Powershell, in you Python import os then do os.system('color'). From then on, ANSI escape sequences will magically work.
    – DoomGoober
    Sep 22, 2020 at 23:52
332

Define a string that starts a color and a string that ends the color. Then print your text with the start string at the front and the end string at the end.

CRED = '\033[91m'
CEND = '\033[0m'
print(CRED + "Error, does not compute!" + CEND)

This produces the following in Bash, in urxvt with a Zenburn-style color scheme:

Output colors

Through experimentation, we can get more colors:

Color matrix

Note: \33[5m and \33[6m are blinking.

This way we can create a full color collection:

CEND      = '\33[0m'
CBOLD     = '\33[1m'
CITALIC   = '\33[3m'
CURL      = '\33[4m'
CBLINK    = '\33[5m'
CBLINK2   = '\33[6m'
CSELECTED = '\33[7m'

CBLACK  = '\33[30m'
CRED    = '\33[31m'
CGREEN  = '\33[32m'
CYELLOW = '\33[33m'
CBLUE   = '\33[34m'
CVIOLET = '\33[35m'
CBEIGE  = '\33[36m'
CWHITE  = '\33[37m'

CBLACKBG  = '\33[40m'
CREDBG    = '\33[41m'
CGREENBG  = '\33[42m'
CYELLOWBG = '\33[43m'
CBLUEBG   = '\33[44m'
CVIOLETBG = '\33[45m'
CBEIGEBG  = '\33[46m'
CWHITEBG  = '\33[47m'

CGREY    = '\33[90m'
CRED2    = '\33[91m'
CGREEN2  = '\33[92m'
CYELLOW2 = '\33[93m'
CBLUE2   = '\33[94m'
CVIOLET2 = '\33[95m'
CBEIGE2  = '\33[96m'
CWHITE2  = '\33[97m'

CGREYBG    = '\33[100m'
CREDBG2    = '\33[101m'
CGREENBG2  = '\33[102m'
CYELLOWBG2 = '\33[103m'
CBLUEBG2   = '\33[104m'
CVIOLETBG2 = '\33[105m'
CBEIGEBG2  = '\33[106m'
CWHITEBG2  = '\33[107m'

Here is the code to generate the test:

x = 0
for i in range(24):
  colors = ""
  for j in range(5):
    code = str(x+j)
    colors = colors + "\33[" + code + "m\\33[" + code + "m\033[0m "
  print(colors)
  x = x + 5
5
  • 3
    What shell or terminal makes it blink?
    – Zypps987
    Jun 7, 2017 at 12:57
  • 2
    (u)rxvt for example
    – qubodup
    Jun 12, 2017 at 8:56
  • FYI - What is labeled "beige" above is a light cyan on Apple's Terminal (and also in many other lists of color names for Python). Also, some of the double colors are light/dark versions, and the white variants I would call white and grey ...
    – uliwitness
    Mar 24, 2021 at 11:25
  • 3
    @captain \33[25m should also mean "Not blinking", without resetting other styles - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… Aug 15, 2021 at 22:12
  • 1
    Turned your list into a class. Love it. Use it often. Thank you! Aug 18, 2022 at 2:45
180

Here's a solution that works on Windows 10 natively.

Using a system call, such as os.system(""), allows colours to be printed in Command Prompt and Powershell natively:

import os

# System call
os.system("")

# Class of different styles
class style():
    BLACK = '\033[30m'
    RED = '\033[31m'
    GREEN = '\033[32m'
    YELLOW = '\033[33m'
    BLUE = '\033[34m'
    MAGENTA = '\033[35m'
    CYAN = '\033[36m'
    WHITE = '\033[37m'
    UNDERLINE = '\033[4m'
    RESET = '\033[0m'

print(style.YELLOW + "Hello, World!")

Note: Windows does not fully support ANSI codes, whether through system calls or modules. Not all text decoration is supported, and although the bright colours display, they are identical to the regular colours.

Thanks to @j-l for finding an even shorter method.

tl;dr: Add os.system("")

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  • 3
    This works - I'm really surprised that the color command enables ANSI codes in the Windows terminal, I've gone for years without knowing this was possible - the command itself doesn't give any clue that it does this. Jun 3, 2019 at 15:19
  • 6
    Thanks so much for your answer, @SimpleBinary! Playing around with your answer, I've found that you can simplify if sys.platform.lower() == "win32": os.system('color') even further by simply replacing it with just os.system(''). No condition is needed, and the code runs in both Windows 10 and Linux (when I tested it). As you can see, you don't have to make a system call to color. Calls to dir, cd, abcdef, and just an empty string work fine (although the non-empty strings will likely print output you don't want to see).
    – J-L
    Mar 24, 2020 at 17:12
  • 4
    In short, the call to color isn't the crucial part; it's the os.system(command) line itself that makes printing colors possible when running on Windows 10. And the "command" can be anything, really -- even just an empty string.
    – J-L
    Mar 24, 2020 at 18:20
  • 6
    this is really interesting! why does os.system("") cause color codes to work? Oct 15, 2020 at 6:19
  • 3
    @Starwarswii It's not python's implementation, in C running printf(fmt, ...); with ASNI codes in windows after calling system(""); (include <stdlib.h>) does prints the color text, I'm still curious why is that?
    – some dev
    Jun 15, 2021 at 20:56
115

You want to learn about ANSI escape sequences. Here's a brief example:

CSI = "\x1B["
print(CSI+"31;40m" + "Colored Text" + CSI + "0m")

For more information, see ANSI escape code.

For a block character, try a Unicode character like \u2588:

print(u"\u2588")

Putting it all together:

print(CSI+"31;40m" + u"\u2588" + CSI + "0m")
7
  • 4
    Try def d(*v): return '\x1B['+';'.join(map(str, v))+'m' then print ' '.join([d(k,i)+str(i%10)+d(0) for i in range(30,38)+range(40,48) for k in range(2)]) Dec 29, 2013 at 10:56
  • what is the meaning of reset here?
    – MohitC
    Dec 26, 2017 at 12:31
  • I've been trying this solution. What is the purpose of "31;40m" and "0m"?
    – Qohelet
    Feb 18, 2021 at 14:28
  • @Qohelet: did you follow the link to "ANSI escape code"? It explains how ANSI escape sequences work. The first set of numbers tell the terminal to start using a specific foreground and background color, the 0m tells the terminal to stop using that color. Feb 18, 2021 at 15:25
  • @BryanOakley - I wonder as this is not happening. Python3.7 prints it as regular text.
    – Qohelet
    Feb 18, 2021 at 15:41
113

sty is similar to colorama, but it's less verbose, supports 8-bit and 24-bit (RGB) colors, supports all effects (bold, underline, etc.), allows you to register your own styles, is fully typed and high performant, supports muting, is not messing with globals such as sys.stdout, is really flexible, well documented and more...

Examples:

from sty import fg, bg, ef, rs

foo = fg.red + 'This is red text!' + fg.rs
bar = bg.blue + 'This has a blue background!' + bg.rs
baz = ef.italic + 'This is italic text' + rs.italic
qux = fg(201) + 'This is pink text using 8bit colors' + fg.rs
qui = fg(255, 10, 10) + 'This is red text using 24bit colors.' + fg.rs

# Add custom colors:

from sty import Style, RgbFg

fg.orange = Style(RgbFg(255, 150, 50))

buf = fg.orange + 'Yay, Im orange.' + fg.rs

print(foo, bar, baz, qux, qui, buf, sep='\n')

prints:

Enter image description here

Demo:

Enter image description here

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  • 8
    It would be very useful if you consider to compare it with colorama, I prefer your library, but just because more short api from the box, and it would be great if it will be more popular. Thanks! Aug 14, 2018 at 12:00
  • 1
    I like sty and I am trying to format my string with sty, one issue is that , when I print multiple colors, can I reset to previous color instead of default color?
    – intijk
    Jun 24, 2019 at 2:30
  • @VictorGavro That's a good idea! I may add a comparison to the documentation.
    – Rotareti
    Jun 24, 2019 at 8:40
  • 1
    @intijk Your question doesn't really fit the comment section. For this kind of question please create a new SO Question or use the github issue tracker.
    – Rotareti
    Jun 24, 2019 at 8:44
  • 1
    Sty is great. In my opinion it should be added to Python's standard library. Nov 6, 2023 at 12:22
102

Rich is a relatively new Python library for working with color in the terminal.

There are a few ways of working with color in Rich. The quickest way to get started would be the rich print method which renders a BBCode-like syntax in to ANSI control codes:

from rich import print
print("[red]Color[/] in the [bold magenta]Terminal[/]!")

There are other ways of applying color with Rich (regex, syntax) and related formatting features.

Screenshot of Rich

0
75

This is, in my opinion, the easiest method. As long as you have the RGB values of the color you want, this should work:

def colored(r, g, b, text):
    return f"\033[38;2;{r};{g};{b}m{text}\033[0m"

An example of printing red text:

text = 'Hello, World!'
colored_text = colored(255, 0, 0, text)
print(colored_text)

#or

print(colored(255, 0, 0, 'Hello, World!'))

Multi-colored text

text = colored(255, 0, 0, 'Hello, ') + colored(0, 255, 0, 'World')
print(text)
9
  • 11
    This is actually the proper answer to the question and should be selected. The question is how to print colours in python and NOT what external libraries can be used.
    – nosbor
    Aug 6, 2021 at 10:09
  • 1
    @mike_rodent This isn't *nix specific but depends on whether terminal supports ANSI
    – USLTD
    Jan 1, 2022 at 17:37
  • 1
    This can be further tidied using a lambda and f-strings: `coloured = lambda r, g, b, text: f'\033[38;2;{r};{g};{b}m{text} \033[38;2;255;255;255m'
    – P i
    Jan 15, 2022 at 10:27
  • 1
    There is a side effect trailing space after the current implementation. You can get rid of by removing the trailing space from the string format. Use this instead: f"\033[38;2;{r};{g};{b}m{text}\033[38;2;255;255;255m"
    – Elyasaf755
    Mar 22, 2022 at 11:42
  • 2
    @Mehdi this wasn't written for python2. Almost everyone is using python3 now, and maintaining backwards compatibility isn't worth the time. If you want it to work for python2, you'll need to use .format() instead of f-strings. Hardly deserves a downvote for not working for an unsupported version of python. May 11, 2022 at 14:03
71

My favorite way is with the Blessings library (full disclosure: I wrote it). For example:

from blessings import Terminal

t = Terminal()
print t.red('This is red.')
print t.bold_bright_red_on_black('Bright red on black')

To print colored bricks, the most reliable way is to print spaces with background colors. I use this technique to draw the progress bar in nose-progressive:

print t.on_green(' ')

You can print in specific locations as well:

with t.location(0, 5):
    print t.on_yellow(' ')

If you have to muck with other terminal capabilities in the course of your game, you can do that as well. You can use Python's standard string formatting to keep it readable:

print '{t.clear_eol}You just cleared a {t.bold}whole{t.normal} line!'.format(t=t)

The nice thing about Blessings is that it does its best to work on all sorts of terminals, not just the (overwhelmingly common) ANSI-color ones. It also keeps unreadable escape sequences out of your code while remaining concise to use. Have fun!

9
  • 75
    Putting the color as a function name and not as a parameter is a questionable practice.
    – LtWorf
    Dec 2, 2012 at 14:48
  • 10
    @progo the fact that you can do it doesn't mean that you should do it. It's more generic if the colour is a parameter that you can just pass.
    – LtWorf
    Sep 30, 2015 at 8:00
  • 4
    You can just pass a python function.
    – MaxNoe
    Nov 20, 2015 at 22:43
  • 2
    Note that importing blessings does not work on windows so don't use it if your script needs to be cross-platform.
    – Adversus
    Apr 26, 2019 at 7:51
  • 2
    @LtWorf I disagree. (1) Use cases for passing around the color as a value are pretty rare. Typical use cases are just to use a specific color, and auto-complettion has a big practical benefit. (2) In a language that supports functions as first-class entities, having Fore.GREEN or t.on_green is equivalent, i.e., it is still possible to pass around colors. Look at how chalk does it, the best library I've ever used for colors.
    – bluenote10
    May 29, 2021 at 17:32
67

I generated a class with all the colors using a for loop to iterate every combination of color up to 100, and then wrote a class with Python colors. Copy and paste as you will, GPLv2 by me:

class colors:
    '''Colors class:
    Reset all colors with colors.reset
    Two subclasses fg for foreground and bg for background.
    Use as colors.subclass.colorname.
    i.e. colors.fg.red or colors.bg.green
    Also, the generic bold, disable, underline, reverse, strikethrough,
    and invisible work with the main class
    i.e. colors.bold
    '''
    reset='\033[0m'
    bold='\033[01m'
    disable='\033[02m'
    underline='\033[04m'
    reverse='\033[07m'
    strikethrough='\033[09m'
    invisible='\033[08m'
    class fg:
        black='\033[30m'
        red='\033[31m'
        green='\033[32m'
        orange='\033[33m'
        blue='\033[34m'
        purple='\033[35m'
        cyan='\033[36m'
        lightgrey='\033[37m'
        darkgrey='\033[90m'
        lightred='\033[91m'
        lightgreen='\033[92m'
        yellow='\033[93m'
        lightblue='\033[94m'
        pink='\033[95m'
        lightcyan='\033[96m'
    class bg:
        black='\033[40m'
        red='\033[41m'
        green='\033[42m'
        orange='\033[43m'
        blue='\033[44m'
        purple='\033[45m'
        cyan='\033[46m'
        lightgrey='\033[47m'
64

Try this simple code

def prRed(prt):
    print(f"\033[91m{prt}\033[00m")

def prGreen(prt):
    print(f"\033[92m{prt}\033[00m")

def prYellow(prt):
    print(f"\033[93m{prt}\033[00m")

def prLightPurple(prt):
    print(f"\033[94m{prt}\033[00m")

def prPurple(prt):
    print(f"\033[95m{prt}\033[00m")

def prCyan(prt):
    print(f"\033[96m{prt}\033[00m")

def prLightGray(prt):
    print(f"\033[97m{prt}\033[00m")

def prBlack(prt):
    print(f"\033[98m{prt}\033[00m")

def prReset(prt):
    print(f"\033[0m{prt}\033[00m")

prGreen("Hello, Green World!")
prBlack("Hello, Black World!")
prCyan("Hello, Cyan World!")
prGreen("Hello, Green World!")
prLightGray("Hello, Light Grey World!")
prLightPurple("Hello, Light Purple World!")
prPurple("Hello, Purple World!")
prRed("Hello, Red World!")
prYellow("Hello, Yellow World!")
prReset("Hello, Reset World!")

Python 3 Example Python 3 Example.

# python2
    def prRed(prt): print("\033[91m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prGreen(prt): print("\033[92m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prYellow(prt): print("\033[93m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prLightPurple(prt): print("\033[94m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prPurple(prt): print("\033[95m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prCyan(prt): print("\033[96m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prLightGray(prt): print("\033[97m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))
    def prBlack(prt): print("\033[98m {}\033[00m" .format(prt))

    prGreen("Hello, World!")
2
  • 30
    Suggestion: define lambdas that returns that colored string, instead of printing them directly, so that it can be used in conjunction with other strings. Jan 22, 2016 at 21:40
  • 1
    Thanks @gustafbstron. This is what I decided to use: def prGreen: return '"\033[91m {}\033[00m" .format(prt) which is used like this: print(f'This will turn {prGreen("Hello world")} and change back')
    – MACE
    Aug 17, 2020 at 20:35
46
# Pure Python 3.x demo, 256 colors
# Works with bash under Linux and MacOS

fg = lambda text, color: "\33[38;5;" + str(color) + "m" + text + "\33[0m"
bg = lambda text, color: "\33[48;5;" + str(color) + "m" + text + "\33[0m"

def print_six(row, format, end="\n"):
    for col in range(6):
        color = row*6 + col - 2
        if color>=0:
            text = "{:3d}".format(color)
            print (format(text,color), end=" ")
        else:
            print(end="    ")   # four spaces
    print(end=end)

for row in range(0, 43):
    print_six(row, fg, " ")
    print_six(row, bg)

# Simple usage: print(fg("text", 160))

Text with altering foreground and background, colors 0..141 Text with altering foreground and background, colors 142..255

Try it online

4
  • The formatting is so nice and it has a lot of color range. I keep coming back to this, thanks! Aug 1, 2020 at 13:44
  • very nice, could you please give me some explanation about "\33[38;5;" .
    – Jay
    Aug 8, 2020 at 12:47
  • 1
    @Jay, this is an escape sequence. '\33' is the escape character (in octal). Aug 8, 2020 at 17:59
  • Excellent pure python solution.
    – n1c9
    Sep 17, 2020 at 22:05
46

I have a library called colorit. It is super simple.

Here are some examples:

from colorit import *

# Use this to ensure that ColorIt will be usable by certain command line interfaces
# Note: This clears the terminal
init_colorit()

# Foreground
print(color("This text is red", Colors.red))
print(color("This text is orange", Colors.orange))
print(color("This text is yellow", Colors.yellow))
print(color("This text is green", Colors.green))
print(color("This text is blue", Colors.blue))
print(color("This text is purple", Colors.purple))
print(color("This text is white", Colors.white))

# Background
print(background("This text has a background that is red", Colors.red))
print(background("This text has a background that is orange", Colors.orange))
print(background("This text has a background that is yellow", Colors.yellow))
print(background("This text has a background that is green", Colors.green))
print(background("This text has a background that is blue", Colors.blue))
print(background("This text has a background that is purple", Colors.purple))
print(background("This text has a background that is white", Colors.white))

# Custom
print(color("This color has a custom grey text color", (150, 150, 150)))
print(background("This color has a custom grey background", (150, 150, 150)))

# Combination
print(
    background(
        color("This text is blue with a white background", Colors.blue), Colors.white
    )
)

# If you are using Windows Command Line, this is so that it doesn't close immediately
input()

This gives you:

Picture of ColorIt

It's also worth noting that this is cross platform and has been tested on Mac, Linux, and Windows.

You might want to try it out: https://github.com/SuperMaZingCoder/colorit

colorit is now available to be installed with PyPi! You can install it with pip install color-it on Windows and pip3 install color-it on macOS and Linux.

8
  • when it will be possibility to install it with pip usage?
    – ncopiy
    Jun 14, 2020 at 15:24
  • @ncopiy Hello! I am actually planning to do that within the next two days! :D For now, you can install it with the install instructions on the page.
    – BeastCoder
    Jun 14, 2020 at 17:51
  • @ncopiy It is now available to be installed with pip3 (or pip). The command is pip3 install color-it or pip install color-it and can be imported with import colorit.
    – BeastCoder
    Jul 26, 2020 at 19:58
  • I don't know why, but my texts are not colorized by the color provided on the Colors.etc... All my texts are turning into gray texts, but with different tone (lighter / darker)... Aug 29, 2020 at 7:14
  • @Victor Hmm, assuming you have an init_colorit() statement somewhere, it may be your terminal. What does it do in other terminals?
    – BeastCoder
    Sep 3, 2020 at 15:14
41

On Windows you can use module 'win32console' (available in some Python distributions) or module 'ctypes' (Python 2.5 and up) to access the Win32 API.

To see complete code that supports both ways, see the color console reporting code from Testoob.

ctypes example:

import ctypes

# Constants from the Windows API
STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE = -11
FOREGROUND_RED    = 0x0004 # text color contains red.

def get_csbi_attributes(handle):
    # Based on IPython's winconsole.py, written by Alexander Belchenko
    import struct
    csbi = ctypes.create_string_buffer(22)
    res = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo(handle, csbi)
    assert res

    (bufx, bufy, curx, cury, wattr,
    left, top, right, bottom, maxx, maxy) = struct.unpack("hhhhHhhhhhh", csbi.raw)
    return wattr


handle = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE)
reset = get_csbi_attributes(handle)

ctypes.windll.kernel32.SetConsoleTextAttribute(handle, FOREGROUND_RED)
print "Cherry on top"
ctypes.windll.kernel32.SetConsoleTextAttribute(handle, reset)
4
  • 3
    Honestly this is only solution that works with windows. All other answers are just copy of eachothers.
    – Danilo
    Sep 25, 2019 at 13:07
  • FWIW, on Windows it might be less pain to use ConEmu which supports ANSI sequences (apart from a host of other advantages over the native terminal). Still great to have a native solution though.
    – Endre Both
    Dec 6, 2019 at 10:04
  • 1
    I am with Danilo. May 7, 2020 at 15:18
  • 2
    @Danilo notice this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/3332860/12291742 Jun 24, 2020 at 14:16
38

I have wrapped joeld's answer into a module with global functions that I can use anywhere in my code.

File: log.py

def enable():
    HEADER = '\033[95m'
    OKBLUE = '\033[94m'
    OKGREEN = '\033[92m'
    WARNING = '\033[93m'
    FAIL = '\033[91m'
    ENDC = '\033[0m'
    BOLD = "\033[1m"

def disable():
    HEADER = ''
    OKBLUE = ''
    OKGREEN = ''
    WARNING = ''
    FAIL = ''
    ENDC = ''

def infog(msg):
    print(OKGREEN + msg + ENDC)

def info(msg):
    print(OKBLUE + msg + ENDC)

def warn(msg):
    print(WARNING + msg + ENDC)

def err(msg):
    print(FAIL + msg + ENDC)

enable()

Use as follows:

import log
log.info("Hello, World!")
log.err("System Error")
35

Here is my modern (2021) solution: yachalk

It is one of the few libraries that properly supports nested styles:

enter image description here

Apart from that yachalk is auto-complete-friendly, has 256/truecolor support, comes with terminal-capability detection, and is fully typed.

Here are some design decision you may consider for choosing your solution.

High-level libraries vs low-level libraries / manual style handling?

Many answers to this question demonstrate how to ANSI escape codes directly, or suggest low-level libraries that require manual style enabling/disabling.

These approaches have subtle issues: Inserting on/off styles manually is

  • more verbose syntactically, because resets have to be specified explicitly,
  • more error prone, because you can accidentally forget to reset a style,
  • fails to get edge cases right: For instance in some terminals it is necessary to reset styles before newlines, and re-activate them after the line break. Also, some terminal have problems with simply overriding mutually exclusive styles, and require inserting "unnecessary" reset codes. If a developer's local terminal doesn't have these quirks, the developer will not discover these quirks immediately. The issue will only be reported later by others or cause problems e.g. on CI terminals.

Therefore if compatibility with many terminals is a goal, it's best to use a high-level library that offers automatic handling of style resets. This allows the library to take care of all edge cases by inserting the "spurious" ANSI escape codes where needed.

Why yet another library?

In JavaScript the de-facto standard library for the task is chalk, and after using it for a while in JS projects, the solutions available in the Python world were lacking in comparison. Not only is the chalk API more convenient to use (fully auto-complete compatible), it also gets all the edge cases right.

The idea of yachalk is to bring the same convenience to the Python ecosystem. If you're interested in a comparison to other libraries I've started feature comparison on the projects page. In addition, here is a long (but still incomplete) list of alternatives that came up during my research -- a lot to choose from :)

1
33
def black(text):
    print('\033[30m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def red(text):
    print('\033[31m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def green(text):
    print('\033[32m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def yellow(text):
    print('\033[33m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def blue(text):
    print('\033[34m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def magenta(text):
    print('\033[35m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def cyan(text):
    print('\033[36m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')

def gray(text):
    print('\033[90m', text, '\033[0m', sep='')


black("BLACK")
red("RED")
green("GREEN")
yellow("YELLOW")
blue("BLACK")
magenta("MAGENTA")
cyan("CYAN")
gray("GRAY")

Try online

2
  • 1
    Is this for python3 only? got an error on sep='' with python2 Nov 8, 2019 at 20:51
  • 1
    This should be the accepted answer for python3. Works perfectly.
    – vfxdev
    Aug 24, 2020 at 13:35
30

I ended up doing this, and I felt it was cleanest:

formatters = {
    'RED': '\033[91m',
    'GREEN': '\033[92m',
    'END': '\033[0m',
}

print 'Master is currently {RED}red{END}!'.format(**formatters)
print 'Help make master {GREEN}green{END} again!'.format(**formatters)
1
  • This is really nice for doing it without a third party package. Mar 20, 2017 at 19:53
27

For Windows you cannot print to console with colors unless you're using the Win32 API.

For Linux it's as simple as using print, with the escape sequences outlined here:

Colors

For the character to print like a box, it really depends on what font you are using for the console window. The pound symbol works well, but it depends on the font:

#
1
  • 1
    In windows 10 colors work like linux if you call os.system('') at the beginning of your code
    – mousetail
    Oct 3, 2020 at 12:57
24

Stupidly simple, based on joeld's answer:

class PrintInColor:
    RED = '\033[91m'
    GREEN = '\033[92m'
    YELLOW = '\033[93m'
    LIGHT_PURPLE = '\033[94m'
    PURPLE = '\033[95m'
    END = '\033[0m'

    @classmethod
    def red(cls, s, **kwargs):
        print(cls.RED + s + cls.END, **kwargs)

    @classmethod
    def green(cls, s, **kwargs):
        print(cls.GREEN + s + cls.END, **kwargs)

    @classmethod
    def yellow(cls, s, **kwargs):
        print(cls.YELLOW + s + cls.END, **kwargs)

    @classmethod
    def lightPurple(cls, s, **kwargs):
        print(cls.LIGHT_PURPLE + s + cls.END, **kwargs)

    @classmethod
    def purple(cls, s, **kwargs):
        print(cls.PURPLE + s + cls.END, **kwargs)

Then just

PrintInColor.red('hello', end=' ')
PrintInColor.green('world')
5
  • 2
    This will crash if you pass more than one positional argument or anything other than a string type Mar 19, 2018 at 2:49
  • @RomainVincent Then don't pass more than one positional argument or anything other than a string ty— wait, these are print-replacements? Objection rescinded.
    – wizzwizz4
    Mar 17, 2019 at 20:56
  • 1
    @wizzwizz4 I'm not sure what you meant with this comment, I don't see the point anyway. If you are going to propose a class..., to replace a method as simple as print, you might as well avoid making it so easily breakable. Just my opinion. Mar 18, 2019 at 8:18
  • 1
    @RomainVincent I was going to say that your objection was wrong, but for replacing a function as versatile as print one should make sure to properly replicate its functionality.
    – wizzwizz4
    Mar 18, 2019 at 20:10
  • 1
    @RomainVincent Implements to use infinite arguments : <code> def purple(cls, *args, **kwargs): print(cls.PURPLE, *args, cls.END, **kwargs) </code> Nov 9, 2019 at 12:51
24

Building on joeld's answer, using https://pypi.python.org/pypi/lazyme
pip install -U lazyme:

from lazyme.string import color_print
>>> color_print('abc')
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='pink')
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='red')
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='yellow')
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='green')
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='blue', underline=True)
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='blue', underline=True, bold=True)
abc
>>> color_print('abc', color='pink', underline=True, bold=True)
abc

Screenshot:

Enter image description here


Some updates to the color_print with new formatters, e.g.:

>>> from lazyme.string import palette, highlighter, formatter
>>> from lazyme.string import color_print
>>> palette.keys() # Available colors.
['pink', 'yellow', 'cyan', 'magenta', 'blue', 'gray', 'default', 'black', 'green', 'white', 'red']
>>> highlighter.keys() # Available highlights.
['blue', 'pink', 'gray', 'black', 'yellow', 'cyan', 'green', 'magenta', 'white', 'red']
>>> formatter.keys() # Available formatter,
['hide', 'bold', 'italic', 'default', 'fast_blinking', 'faint', 'strikethrough', 'underline', 'blinking', 'reverse']

Note: italic, fast blinking, and strikethrough may not work on all terminals, and they don't work on Mac and Ubuntu.

E.g.,

>>> color_print('foo bar', color='pink', highlight='white')
foo bar
>>> color_print('foo bar', color='pink', highlight='white', reverse=True)
foo bar
>>> color_print('foo bar', color='pink', highlight='white', bold=True)
foo bar
>>> color_print('foo bar', color='pink', highlight='white', faint=True)
foo bar
>>> color_print('foo bar', color='pink', highlight='white', faint=True, reverse=True)
foo bar
>>> color_print('foo bar', color='pink', highlight='white', underline=True, reverse=True)
foo bar

Screenshot:

Enter image description here

0
23

Note how well the with keyword mixes with modifiers like these that need to be reset (using Python 3 and Colorama):

from colorama import Fore, Style
import sys

class Highlight:
  def __init__(self, clazz, color):
    self.color = color
    self.clazz = clazz
  def __enter__(self):
    print(self.color, end="")
  def __exit__(self, type, value, traceback):
    if self.clazz == Fore:
      print(Fore.RESET, end="")
    else:
      assert self.clazz == Style
      print(Style.RESET_ALL, end="")
    sys.stdout.flush()

with Highlight(Fore, Fore.GREEN):
  print("this is highlighted")
print("this is not")
6
  • Tried out colorama, used print(Style.BRIGHT + "Header Test") and print (Style.DIM + word) to create a really nice prompt.
    – Tom
    Nov 7, 2013 at 16:02
  • This will need to change to use contextlib for Py3.
    – cat
    Jan 15, 2016 at 21:42
  • @cat: From what version of Python will that be necessary? Jan 16, 2016 at 10:46
  • I believe 3 and up -- it should have a @contextlib.contextmanager decorator on it, no?
    – cat
    Jan 16, 2016 at 14:41
  • 1
    @cat: Why? Works great without. Jan 17, 2016 at 12:42
21

You could use Clint:

from clint.textui import colored
print colored.red('some warning message')
print colored.green('nicely done!')
1
  • 1
    First link has gone so I removed it; the GH link is still good (although the project is "archived" and basically abandoned, from what I can gather). Aug 23, 2018 at 20:22
19

You can use the Python implementation of the curses library: curses — Terminal handling for character-cell displays

Also, run this and you'll find your box:

for i in range(255):
    print i, chr(i)
1
  • Personally I think that the 'curses' library has been totally eclipsed by 'blessings', in the same way 'requests' has eclipsed 'urllib', etc. Aug 18, 2015 at 11:09
19

Emoji

You can use colors for text as others mentioned in their answers to have colorful text with a background or foreground color.

But you can use emojis instead! for example, you can use⚠️ for warning messages and 🛑 for error messages.

Or simply use these notebooks as a color:

📕: error message
📙: warning message
📗: ok status message
📘: action message
📓: canceled status message
📔: Or anything you like and want to recognize immediately by color

🎁 Bonus:

This method also helps you to quickly scan and find logs directly in the source code.

But some operating systems (including some Linux distributions in some version with some window managers) default emoji font is not colorful by default and you may want to make them colorful, first.


How to open emoji picker?

mac os: control + command + space

windows: win + .

linux: control + . or control + ;

8
  • 1
    This wasn't asked but I'm glad you shared it regardless! I really prefer this to text colors.
    – smassey
    Oct 4, 2020 at 15:23
  • Linux? What distribution, version, and window manager? Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal Fossa)? Jan 9, 2021 at 20:56
  • Answer updated for more being precise. Thanks to point out @PeterMortensen Jan 9, 2021 at 21:16
  • 2
    Emojis are unicodes. you can find out more about them online by searching "emoji" 😉 May 17, 2022 at 19:19
  • 1
    There are my emoji favourites: print("❌", "ERROR:", "Cross Mark Emoji") print("✔️", "SUCCESS:", "Heavy Check Mark Emoji") Jul 14, 2022 at 6:42
16

If you are programming a game perhaps you would like to change the background color and use only spaces? For example:

print " "+ "\033[01;41m" + " " +"\033[01;46m"  + "  " + "\033[01;42m"
1
15

An easier option would be to use the cprint function from the termcolor package.

color-print-python

It also supports %s, %d format of printing:

Enter image description here

Results can be terminal dependant, so review the Terminal Properties section of the package documentation.

  • Windows Command Prompt and Python IDLE don't work

enter image description here

enter image description here

  • JupyterLab notebook does work

enter image description here

1
14

The simplest and convenient way of doing this, considering if you're writing a command-line tool. This method will work anywhere on all consoles, without installing any fancy packages.

To get the ANSI codes working on Windows, first, run os.system('color')

import os
os.system('color')

COLOR = '\033[91m'  # change it, according to the color need

END = '\033[0m'

print(COLOR + "Hello World" + END) #print a message


exit=input() #to avoid closing the terminal windows


For more colours :

enter image description here

Note: \33[5m and \33[6m are blinking.

Thanks to @qubodup

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