figure

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Published: Aug 10, 2020 License: MIT Imports: 14 Imported by: 0

README

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Go Figure

Description

Go Figure prints beautiful ASCII art from text. It supports FIGlet files, and most of its features.

This package was inspired by the Ruby gem artii, but built from scratch and with a different feature set.

Installation

go get github.com/common-nighthawk/go-figure

Basic Example

package main

import("github.com/common-nighthawk/go-figure")

func main() {
  myFigure := figure.NewFigure("Hello World", "", true)
  myFigure.Print()
}
  _   _          _   _          __        __                 _       _ 
 | | | |   ___  | | | |   ___   \ \      / /   ___    _ __  | |   __| |
 | |_| |  / _ \ | | | |  / _ \   \ \ /\ / /   / _ \  | '__| | |  / _` |
 |  _  | |  __/ | | | | | (_) |   \ V  V /   | (_) | | |    | | | (_| |
 |_| |_|  \___| |_| |_|  \___/     \_/\_/     \___/  |_|    |_|  \__,_|

You can also make colorful figures:

func main() {
  myFigure := figure.NewColorFigure("Hello World", "", "green", true)
  myFigure.Print()
}

Documentation

Create a Figure

There are three ways to create a Figure. These are-- the method func NewFigure, the method func NewColorFigure, and the method func NewFigureWithFont.

Each constructor takes the arguments: the text, font, and strict mode. The "color" constructor takes a color as an additional arg. The "with font" specifies the font differently. The method signature are:

func NewFigure(phrase, fontName string, strict bool) figure
func NewColorFigure(phrase, fontName string, color string, strict bool) figure
func NewFigureWithFont(phrase string, reader io.Reader, strict bool) figure

NewFigure requires only the name of the font, and uses the font file shipped with this package stored in bindata.

If passed an empty string for the font name, a default is provided. That is, these are both valid--

myFigure := figure.NewFigure("Foo Bar", "", true)

myFigure := figure.NewFigure("Foo Bar", "alphabet", true)

Please note that font names are case sensitive.

NewFigureWithFont, on the other hand, accepts the font file directly. This allows you to BYOF (bring your own font). Provide the absolute path to the flf. You can point to a file the comes with this project or you can store the file anywhere you'd like and use that location.

The font files are available in the fonts folder and on figlet.org.

Here are two examples--

myFigure := figure.NewFigureWithFont("Foo Bar", "/home/ubuntu/go/src/github.com/common-nighthawk/go-figure/fonts/alphabet.flf", true)

myFigure := figure.NewFigureWithFont("Foo Bar", "/home/lib/fonts/alaphabet.flf", true)

You can also make colorful figures! The current supported colors are: blue, cyan, gray, green, purple, red, white, yellow.

An example--

`myFigure := figure.NewColorFigure("Foo Bar", "", "green", true)

Strict mode dictates how to handle characters outside of standard ASCII. When set to true, a non-ASCII character (outside character codes 32-127) will cause the program to panic. When set to false, these characters are replaced with a question mark ('?'). Examples of each--

figure.NewFigure("Foo 👍 Bar", "alphabet", true).Print()

2016/12/01 19:35:38 invalid input.

figure.NewFigure("Foo 👍 Bar", "alphabet", false).Print()

 _____                     ___     ____                 
 |  ___|   ___     ___     |__ \   | __ )    __ _   _ __ 
 | |_     / _ \   / _ \      / /   |  _ \   / _` | | '__|
 |  _|   | (_) | | (_) |    |_|    | |_) | | (_| | | |   
 |_|      \___/   \___/     (_)    |____/   \__,_| |_|   
Methods: stdout
Print()

The most basic, and common, method is func Print. A figure responds to Print(), and will write the output to the terminal. There is no return value.

myFigure.Print()

But if you're feeling adventurous, explore the methods below.

A figure responds to the func Blink, taking three arguments. duration is the total time the banner will display, in milliseconds. timeOn is the length of time the text will blink on (also in ms). timeOff is the length of time the text will blink off (ms). For an even blink, set timeOff to -1 (same as setting timeOff to the value of timeOn). There is no return value.

myFigure.Blink(5000, 1000, 500)

myFigure.Blink(5000, 1000, -1)

Scroll(duration, stillness int, direction string)

A figure responds to the func Scroll, taking three arguments. duration is the total time the banner will display, in milliseconds. stillness is the length of time the text will not move (also in ms). Therefore, the lower the stillness the faster the scroll speed. direction can be either "right" or "left" (case insensitive). The direction will be left if an invalid option (e.g. "foo") is passed. There is no return value.

myFigure.Scroll(5000, 200, "right")

myFigure.Scroll(5000, 100, "left")

Dance(duration, freeze int)

A figure responds to the func Dance, taking two arguments. duration is the total time the banner will display, in milliseconds. freeze is the length of time between dance moves (also in ms). Therefore, the lower the freeze the faster the dancing. There is no return value.

myFigure.Dance(5000, 800)

Methods: Writers
Write(w io.Writer, fig figure)

Unlike the above methods that operate on a figure value, func Write is a function that takes two arguments. w is a value that implements all the methods in the io.Writer interface. fig is the figure that will be written.

figure.Write(w, myFigure)

This method would be useful, for example, to add a nifty banner to a web page--

func landingPage(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
  figure.Write(w, myFigure)
}
Methods: Misc
Slicify() ([]string)

If you want to do something outside of the created methods, you can grab the internal slice. This gives you a good start to build anything with the ASCII art, if manually.

A figure responds to the func Slicify, and will return the slice of strings.

myFigure.Slicify()

returns

["FFFF           BBBB         ",
 "F              B   B        ",
 "FFF  ooo ooo   BBBB   aa rrr",
 "F    o o o o   B   B a a r  ",
 "F    ooo ooo   BBBB  aaa r  "]

More Examples

figure.NewFigure("Go-Figure", "isometric1", true).Print()

      ___           ___           ___                       ___           ___           ___           ___     
     /\  \         /\  \         /\  \          ___        /\  \         /\__\         /\  \         /\  \    
    /::\  \       /::\  \       /::\  \        /\  \      /::\  \       /:/  /        /::\  \       /::\  \   
   /:/\:\  \     /:/\:\  \     /:/\:\  \       \:\  \    /:/\:\  \     /:/  /        /:/\:\  \     /:/\:\  \  
  /:/  \:\  \   /:/  \:\  \   /::\~\:\  \      /::\__\  /:/  \:\  \   /:/  /  ___   /::\~\:\  \   /::\~\:\  \ 
 /:/__/_\:\__\ /:/__/ \:\__\ /:/\:\ \:\__\  __/:/\/__/ /:/__/_\:\__\ /:/__/  /\__\ /:/\:\ \:\__\ /:/\:\ \:\__\
 \:\  /\ \/__/ \:\  \ /:/  / \/__\:\ \/__/ /\/:/  /    \:\  /\ \/__/ \:\  \ /:/  / \/_|::\/:/  / \:\~\:\ \/__/
  \:\ \:\__\    \:\  /:/  /       \:\__\   \::/__/      \:\ \:\__\    \:\  /:/  /     |:|::/  /   \:\ \:\__\  
   \:\/:/  /     \:\/:/  /         \/__/    \:\__\       \:\/:/  /     \:\/:/  /      |:|\/__/     \:\ \/__/  
    \::/  /       \::/  /                    \/__/        \::/  /       \::/  /       |:|  |        \:\__\    
     \/__/         \/__/                                   \/__/         \/__/         \|__|         \/__/    

figure.NewFigure("Foo Bar Pop", "smkeyboard", true).Print()

 ____  ____  ____  ____  ____  ____  ____  ____  ____ 
||F ||||o ||||o ||||B ||||a ||||r ||||P ||||o ||||p ||
||__||||__||||__||||__||||__||||__||||__||||__||||__||
|/__\||/__\||/__\||/__\||/__\||/__\||/__\||/__\||/__\|

figure.NewFigure("Keep Your Eyes On Me", "rectangles", true).Print()

                                                                                          
 _____                 __ __                 _____                 _____       _____      
|  |  | ___  ___  ___ |  |  | ___  _ _  ___ |   __| _ _  ___  ___ |     | ___ |     | ___ 
|    -|| -_|| -_|| . ||_   _|| . || | ||  _||   __|| | || -_||_ -||  |  ||   || | | || -_|
|__|__||___||___||  _|  |_|  |___||___||_|  |_____||_  ||___||___||_____||_|_||_|_|_||___|
                 |_|                               |___|                                  

figure.NewFigure("ABCDEFGHIJ", "eftichess", true).Print()

#########         #########   ___   #########         #########                           
##[`'`']#  \`~'/  ##'\v/`##  /\*/\  ##|`+'|##  '\v/`  ##\`~'/##  [`'`']   '\v/`    \`~'/  
###|  |##  (o o)  ##(o 0)## /(o o)\ ##(o o)##  (o 0)  ##(o o)##   |  |    (o 0)    (o o)  
###|__|##   \ / \ ###(_)###   (_)   ###(_)###   (_)   ###\ / \#   |__|     (_)      \ / \ 
#########    "    #########         #########         ####"####                      "    

figure.NewFigure("Give your reasons", "doom", true).Blink(10000, 500, -1)

blink

figure.NewFigure("I mean, I could...", "basic", true).Scroll(10000, 200, "right")

figure.NewFigure("But why would I want to?", "basic", true).Scroll(10000, 200, "left")

scroll

figure.NewFigure("It's been waiting for you", "larry3d", true).Dance(10000, 500)

dance

figure.Write(w, figure.NewFigure("Hello, It's Me", "puffy", true))

web

Supported Fonts

  • 3-d
  • 3x5
  • 5lineoblique
  • acrobatic
  • alligator
  • alligator2
  • alphabet
  • avatar
  • banner
  • banner3-D
  • banner3
  • banner4
  • barbwire
  • basic
  • bell
  • big
  • bigchief
  • binary
  • block
  • bubble
  • bulbhead
  • calgphy2
  • caligraphy
  • catwalk
  • chunky
  • coinstak
  • colossal
  • computer
  • contessa
  • contrast
  • cosmic
  • cosmike
  • cricket
  • cursive
  • cyberlarge
  • cybermedium
  • cybersmall
  • diamond
  • digital
  • doh
  • doom
  • dotmatrix
  • drpepper
  • eftichess
  • eftifont
  • eftipiti
  • eftirobot
  • eftitalic
  • eftiwall
  • eftiwater
  • epic
  • fender
  • fourtops
  • fuzzy
  • goofy
  • gothic
  • graffiti
  • hollywood
  • invita
  • isometric1
  • isometric2
  • isometric3
  • isometric4
  • italic
  • ivrit
  • jazmine
  • jerusalem
  • katakana
  • kban
  • larry3d
  • lcd
  • lean
  • letters
  • linux
  • lockergnome
  • madrid
  • marquee
  • maxfour
  • mike
  • mini
  • mirror
  • mnemonic
  • morse
  • moscow
  • nancyj-fancy
  • nancyj-underlined
  • nancyj
  • nipples
  • ntgreek
  • o8
  • ogre
  • pawp
  • peaks
  • pebbles
  • pepper
  • poison
  • puffy
  • pyramid
  • rectangles
  • relief
  • relief2
  • rev
  • roman
  • rot13
  • rounded
  • rowancap
  • rozzo
  • runic
  • runyc
  • sblood
  • script
  • serifcap
  • shadow
  • short
  • slant
  • slide
  • slscript
  • small
  • smisome1
  • smkeyboard
  • smscript
  • smshadow
  • smslant
  • smtengwar
  • speed
  • stampatello
  • standard
  • starwars
  • stellar
  • stop
  • straight
  • tanja
  • tengwar
  • term
  • thick
  • thin
  • threepoint
  • ticks
  • ticksslant
  • tinker-toy
  • tombstone
  • trek
  • tsalagi
  • twopoint
  • univers
  • usaflag
  • wavy
  • weird

Contributing

Because this project is small, we can dispense with formality. Submit a pull request, open an issue, request a change. All good!

Wanna Say Thanks?

GitHub stars are helpful. Most importantly, they help with discoverability. Projects with more stars are displayed higher in search results when people are looking for packages. Also--they make contributors feel good :)

If you are feeling especially generous, give a shout to @cmmn_nighthawk.

TODO

  • Add proper support for spaces
  • More animations
  • Implement graceful line-wrapping and smushing
  • Deep-copy font for Dance (current implementation is destructive)

Documentation

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

This section is empty.

Functions

func Asset

func Asset(name string) ([]byte, error)

Asset loads and returns the asset for the given name. It returns an error if the asset could not be found or could not be loaded.

func AssetDir

func AssetDir(name string) ([]string, error)

AssetDir returns the file names below a certain directory embedded in the file by go-bindata. For example if you run go-bindata on data/... and data contains the following hierarchy:

data/
  foo.txt
  img/
    a.png
    b.png

then AssetDir("data") would return []string{"foo.txt", "img"} AssetDir("data/img") would return []string{"a.png", "b.png"} AssetDir("foo.txt") and AssetDir("notexist") would return an error AssetDir("") will return []string{"data"}.

func AssetInfo

func AssetInfo(name string) (os.FileInfo, error)

AssetInfo loads and returns the asset info for the given name. It returns an error if the asset could not be found or could not be loaded.

func AssetNames

func AssetNames() []string

AssetNames returns the names of the assets.

func MustAsset

func MustAsset(name string) []byte

MustAsset is like Asset but panics when Asset would return an error. It simplifies safe initialization of global variables.

func NewColorFigure

func NewColorFigure(phrase, fontName string, color string, strict bool) figure

func NewFigure

func NewFigure(phrase, fontName string, strict bool) figure

func NewFigureWithFont

func NewFigureWithFont(phrase string, reader io.Reader, strict bool) figure

func RestoreAsset

func RestoreAsset(dir, name string) error

RestoreAsset restores an asset under the given directory

func RestoreAssets

func RestoreAssets(dir, name string) error

RestoreAssets restores an asset under the given directory recursively

func Write

func Write(w io.Writer, fig figure)

writers

Types

This section is empty.

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