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Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: fabulous
Version: 0.1.5
Summary: Makes your terminal output totally fabulous
Home-page: http://lobstertech.com/fabulous.html
Author: J.A. Roberts Tunney
Author-email: jtunney@lobstertech.com
License: MIT
Download-URL: http://lobstertech.com/media/file/fabulous/fabulous-0.1.5.tar.gz
Description: .. -*-restructuredtext-*-
        
        ==========
         Fabulous
        ==========
        
        ---------------------------------------------
         Makes Your Terminal Output Totally Fabulous
        ---------------------------------------------
        
        :Version: 0.1
        :Date: 2009-12-07
        :Copyright: Copyright (c) 2009 Lobstertech, Inc.
        :Manual section: 3
        :Manual group: Library Calls
        
        
        Getting Started
        ===============
        
        Download and extract the latest version::
        
          sudo apt-get install gcc python-imaging python-setuptools
          sudo python setup.py install
        
        Run the demo to see what's available::
        
          python -m fabulous.demo
        
        
        Basic Examples
        ==============
        
        Colors
        ------
        
        4-bit color.  These colors and styles are standard and work almost
        everywhere.  They are useful in helping make your program output
        easier to read::
        
          from fabulous import bold, magenta, highlight_red
        
          print bold(magenta('hello kitty'))
          print highlight_red('DANGER DANGER!')
        
          print bold('hello') + ' ' + magenta( kitty')
        
          assert len(bold('test')) == 4
        
        8-bit color.  If you want to spice things up a bit, Fabulous supports
        xterm256 colors::
        
          from fabulous import fg256, bg256
          print fg256('#F0F', 'hello kitty')
          print fg256('magenta', 'hello kitty')
        
        
        Fancy Text
        ----------
        
        Way cool text.  This is something neat you can use when you program
        starts up to display its name with style::
        
          from fabulous import text
          print text.Text("Fabulous", color='#0099ff', shadow=True, scew=5)
        
        
        Images
        ------
        
        Fabulous lets you print images, which is more fun than useful.
        Fabulous' unique method of printing images really shines when used
        with semi-transparent PNG files.  When blending backgrounds, Fabulous
        assumes by default that your terminal has a black background.  Don't
        worry if your image is huge, it'll be resized by default to fit your
        terminal::
        
          from fabulous import utils, image
          print image.Image("balls.png")
        
          # adjust for a white background
          utils.term.bgcolor = 'white'
          print image.Image("balls.png")
        
        It's scriptable too (like img2txt) ::
        
          python -m fabulous.image balls.png >balls.txt
          cat balls.txt
        
        
        Transient Logging
        -----------------
        
        This is very useful tool for monitoring what your Python scripts are
        doing.  It allows you to have full verbosity without drowning out
        important error messages::
        
          import time, logging
          from fabulous import logs
          logs.basicConfig(level='WARNING')
        
          for n in range(20):
              logging.debug("verbose stuff you don't care about")
              time.sleep(0.1)
          logging.warning("something bad happened!")
          for n in range(20):
              logging.debug("verbose stuff you don't care about")
              time.sleep(0.1)
        
        
        Why Fabulous?
        =============
        
        Here's how Fabulous compares to other similar libraries:
        
        - fabulous_: Licensed MIT.  Focuses on delivering useful features in
          the simplest, most user-friendly way possible (without a repulsive
          name.)  Written in pure-python but will attempt to auto-magically
          compile/link a speedup library.  ~1,000 lines of code.
        
        - libcaca_: WTFPL.  This is the established and respected standard for
          doing totally insane things with ascii art (ever wanted to watch a
          movie on the command line?)  Weighing in at ~72k lines of C, this
          project is a monster.  It uses an older, more complex
          text/dithering-based rendering method.  Compared to fabulous, some
          images look better, some worse.  I found the docs somewhat difficult
          to follow and couldn't find support for transparency or 256-colors.
        
        - asciiporn_: GPL.  Similar to libcaca but has an interesting feature
          for drawing math graphs to the terminal...  Needs to compile C code,
          requires numpy/python2.6, and I couldn't get the darn thing to work.
          Aprox 17k lines of code.
        
        - pygments_: BSD.  Has *excellent* support for terminal syntax highlighting.
        
        - termcolor_: GPL.  Only supports 4-bit ANSI colors.
        
        .. _fabulous: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/fabulous
        .. _libcaca: http://caca.zoy.org/
        .. _termcolor: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/termcolor
        .. _pygments: http://pygments.org/
        .. _asciiporn: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/asciiporn/2009.05.01
        
        
        ToDo
        ====
        
        - <http://www.burgaud.com/bring-colors-to-the-windows-console-with-python/>
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 2 - Pre-Alpha
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Programming Language :: C
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Classifier: Topic :: Artistic Software
Classifier: Topic :: System :: Logging
Classifier: Topic :: Multimedia :: Graphics