46

How do I output colored text to the terminal using Rust? I've tried using the special escape characters that I found in this python answer, but they just print literally. Here is my code:

fn main() {
    println!("\033[93mError\033[0m");
}
3
  • 1
    This seems to be a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/q/33139248 . Mar 16 at 13:24
  • Good point! I certainly hadn't found that question in my pre-post search. Does that mean we should close this question? Mar 16 at 15:19
  • 1
    Yeah, in a perfect world the later question should probably be closed with a link that it is duplicating the original. But I'm new to Rust and haven't read these posts super closely, so I left it as it is and just noted the duplication. Mar 16 at 15:28

3 Answers 3

73

You can use the colored crate to do this. Here is a simple example. with multiple colors and formats:

use colored::Colorize;

fn main() {
    println!(
        "{}, {}, {}, {}, {}, {}, and some normal text.",
        "Bold".bold(),
        "Red".red(),
        "Yellow".yellow(),
        "Green Strikethrough".green().strikethrough(),
        "Blue Underline".blue().underline(),
        "Purple Italics".purple().italic()
    );
}

Sample color output:

colored and formatted text in the terminal with Rust

Each of the format functions (red(), italics(), etc.) can be used on its own as well as in combination with others. But if you use colors in combination with each other, only the last color to be set shows.

3
  • 3
    Another crate to check is lib.rs/crates/termcolor and its wrapper lib.rs/crates/termcolor_output (disclaimer - I've created the latter, but not the former).
    – Cerberus
    Nov 16, 2021 at 3:04
  • 1
    @Cerberus I encourage you to post another answer, if you like! The more the merrier ;-)! Nov 16, 2021 at 16:05
  • 4
    Also I don't think you need to use the format! macro every time - you can just call the Colorize functions on the actual &str (e.g. "Bold".bold() would work instead of format!("Bold").bold())
    – iamkneel
    Oct 8, 2022 at 5:24
55

Rust doesn't have octal escape sequences. You have to use hexadecimal:

println!("\x1b[93mError\x1b[0m");

See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30491.

What happens, and the reason the compiler does not complain, is that \0 is a valid escape sequence in Rust - and represents the NULL character (ASCII code 0). It is just that Rust, unlike C (and Python), does not allow you to specify octal number after that. So it considers the 33 to be normal characters to print.

1
1

This works for me:

cargo add inline_colorization

and in main.rs:

use inline_colorization::*;

fn main() {
  println!("Lets the user {color_red}colorize{color_reset} the and {style_underline}style the output{style_reset} text using inline variables");
}

I am the creator of the mentioned rust crate.

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