module Cucumber::Gherkin::Formatter::AnsiEscapes
Defines aliases for ANSI coloured output. Default colours can be overridden
by defining a GHERKIN_COLORS variable in your shell, very much
like how you can tweak the familiar POSIX command ls with
$LSCOLORS: linux-sxs.org/housekeeping/lscolors.html
The colours that you can change are:
- undefined
-
defaults to
yellow - pending
-
defaults to
yellow - pending_arg
-
defaults to
yellow,bold - executing
-
defaults to
grey - executing_arg
-
defaults to
grey,bold - failed
-
defaults to
red - failed_arg
-
defaults to
red,bold - passed
-
defaults to
green - passed_arg
-
defaults to
green,bold - outline
-
defaults to
cyan - outline_arg
-
defaults to
cyan,bold - skipped
-
defaults to
cyan - skipped_arg
-
defaults to
cyan,bold - comment
-
defaults to
grey - tag
-
defaults to
cyan
For instance, if your shell has a black background and a green font (like the “Homebrew” settings for OS X' Terminal.app), you may want to override passed steps to be white instead of green. Examples:
export GHERKIN_COLORS="passed=white" export GHERKIN_COLORS="passed=white,bold:passed_arg=white,bold,underline"
(If you're on Windows, use SET instead of export). To see what colours and effects are available, just run this in your shell:
ruby -e "require 'rubygems'; require 'term/ansicolor'; puts Term::ANSIColor.attributes"
Although not listed, you can also use grey
Constants
- ALIASES
- COLORS
Private Instance Methods
# File lib/cucumber/gherkin/formatter/ansi_escapes.rb, line 87 def reset "\e[0m" end
# File lib/cucumber/gherkin/formatter/ansi_escapes.rb, line 91 def up(n) "\e[#{n}A" end