mirror of
https://github.com/JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action.git
synced 2023-12-15 20:03:39 +08:00
.. | ||
browser.js | ||
index.js | ||
license | ||
package.json | ||
readme.md |
supports-color
Detect whether a terminal supports color
Install
$ npm install supports-color
Usage
const supportsColor = require('supports-color');
if (supportsColor.stdout) {
console.log('Terminal stdout supports color');
}
if (supportsColor.stdout.has256) {
console.log('Terminal stdout supports 256 colors');
}
if (supportsColor.stderr.has16m) {
console.log('Terminal stderr supports 16 million colors (truecolor)');
}
API
Returns an Object
with a stdout
and stderr
property for testing either streams. Each property is an Object
, or false
if color is not supported.
The stdout
/stderr
objects specifies a level of support for color through a .level
property and a corresponding flag:
.level = 1
and.hasBasic = true
: Basic color support (16 colors).level = 2
and.has256 = true
: 256 color support.level = 3
and.has16m = true
: Truecolor support (16 million colors)
Info
It obeys the --color
and --no-color
CLI flags.
For situations where using --color
is not possible, use the environment variable FORCE_COLOR=1
(level 1), FORCE_COLOR=2
(level 2), or FORCE_COLOR=3
(level 3) to forcefully enable color, or FORCE_COLOR=0
to forcefully disable. The use of FORCE_COLOR
overrides all other color support checks.
Explicit 256/Truecolor mode can be enabled using the --color=256
and --color=16m
flags, respectively.
Related
- supports-color-cli - CLI for this module
- chalk - Terminal string styling done right
Maintainers
Get professional support for this package with a Tidelift subscription
Tidelift helps make open source sustainable for maintainers while giving companies
assurances about security, maintenance, and licensing for their dependencies.
Tidelift helps make open source sustainable for maintainers while giving companies
assurances about security, maintenance, and licensing for their dependencies.