I'm writing various utilities, and I'm really liking colorized text. Nothing fancy, just using escape sequences. I've created a simple class that has a pprint(msg, color) function. I've got it working rather easily after finding the codes here.
The problem that I'm having is that I should be able to turn off the color after printing. For example, let's say a user runs my program that prints almost everything in the default terminal color, but there is an error, and I want to print the error in red. I prefix my error message with '\033[0;32m', and the message is in red. Unfortunately, all text is red until I change it. That's generally fine while my program is running because I know what color the messages should be. However, the color remains after my program ends. Basically, I'd like to read the current color when my program starts, and restore it when finished. The same way that scripts restore the pwd when exiting.
How do I read the current escape sequence?
System: Red Hat 5.x Bash Python 2.3
Thanks for the help.
I don't believe that's possible and it's unlikely to be portable if it were. The best you can do is send sgr0
which resets all attributes to default (not previous). On xterms, sgr0
is Esc[m
. If you want to reset the colors and not affect other attributes, send op
which on xterms is Esc[39;49m
.
These codes should not be hardcoded. You should use terminfo, termcap or [n]curses.