Terminal string styling done right
colors.js used to be the most popular string styling module, but it has serious deficiencies like extending String.prototype
which causes all kinds of problems. Although there are other ones, they either do too much or not enough.
Chalk is a clean and focused alternative.
- Highly performant
- Doesn't extend
String.prototype
- Expressive API
- Ability to nest styles
- Clean and focused
- Auto-detects color support
- Actively maintained
- Used by ~7700 modules as of March 15, 2016
$ npm install --save chalk
const chalk = require('chalk');
console.log(chalk.blue('Hello world!'));
Chalk comes with an easy to use composable API where you just chain and nest the styles you want.
Here without console.log
for purity.
const chalk = require('chalk');
// combine styled and normal strings
chalk.blue('Hello') + 'World' + chalk.red('!');
// compose multiple styles using the chainable API
chalk.blue.bgRed.bold('Hello world!');
// pass in multiple arguments
chalk.blue('Hello', 'World!', 'Foo', 'bar', 'biz', 'baz');
// nest styles
chalk.red('Hello', chalk.underline.bgBlue('world') + '!');
// nest styles of the same type even (color, underline, background)
chalk.green(
'I am a green line ' +
chalk.blue.underline.bold('with a blue substring') +
' that becomes green again!'
);
// ES2015 template literal
const systemStats = `
CPU: ${chalk.red('90%')}
RAM: ${chalk.green('40%')}
DISK: ${chalk.yellow('70%')}
`;
Easily define your own themes.
const chalk = require('chalk');
const error = chalk.bold.red;
console.log(error('Error!'));
Take advantage of console.log string substitution.
const name = 'Sindre';
console.log(chalk.green('Hello %s'), name);
//=> 'Hello Sindre'
Example: chalk.red.bold.underline('Hello', 'world');
Chain styles and call the last one as a method with a string argument. Order doesn't matter, and later styles take precedent in case of a conflict. This simply means that Chalk.red.yellow.green
is equivalent to Chalk.green
.
Multiple arguments will be separated by space.
Color support is automatically detected, but you can override it by setting the enabled
property. You should however only do this in your own code as it applies globally to all chalk consumers.
If you need to change this in a reusable module create a new instance:
const ctx = new chalk.constructor({enabled: false});
Detect whether the terminal supports color. Used internally and handled for you, but exposed for convenience.
Can be overridden by the user with the flags --color
and --no-color
. For situations where using --color
is not possible, add an environment variable FORCE_COLOR
with any value to force color. Trumps --no-color
.
Exposes the styles as ANSI escape codes.
Generally not useful, but you might need just the .open
or .close
escape code if you're mixing externally styled strings with your own.
const chalk = require('chalk');
console.log(chalk.styles.red);
//=> {open: '\u001b[31m', close: '\u001b[39m'}
console.log(chalk.styles.red.open + 'Hello' + chalk.styles.red.close);
reset
bold
dim
italic
(not widely supported)underline
inverse
hidden
strikethrough
(not widely supported)
black
red
green
yellow
blue
(on Windows the bright version is used as normal blue is illegible)magenta
cyan
white
gray
bgBlack
bgRed
bgGreen
bgYellow
bgBlue
bgMagenta
bgCyan
bgWhite
Chalk does not support anything other than the base eight colors, which guarantees it will work on all terminals and systems. Some terminals, specifically xterm
compliant ones, will support the full range of 8-bit colors. For this the lower level ansi-256-colors package can be used.
If you're on Windows, do yourself a favor and use cmder
instead of cmd.exe
.
- chalk-cli - CLI for this module
- ansi-styles - ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal
- supports-color - Detect whether a terminal supports color
- strip-ansi - Strip ANSI escape codes
- has-ansi - Check if a string has ANSI escape codes
- ansi-regex - Regular expression for matching ANSI escape codes
- wrap-ansi - Wordwrap a string with ANSI escape codes
- slice-ansi - Slice a string with ANSI escape codes
MIT © Sindre Sorhus