Questions Concerning colorizing text in Ubuntu terminal.
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@Cougar-0 said in Questions Concerning colorizing text in Ubuntu terminal.:
My first qt program", with that popup window
Now you're talking about a GUI, not a terminal. Please clarify to yourself what you really want to achieve.
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Both!
To know how to control/set text size and color in that popup window is one.
To be able to set the color of text in a linux terminal is the second one.
Then to be able to compare the code and see its differences.
I made a mock up of that code. For the popup window.#include <QApplication> #include <QLabel> #include <QWidget> #include <QTextSize> this is not code! #include <QTextColor> this is not code! int main(int argc, char *argv[ ]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); QLabel hello("<center>Welcome to my first Qt program</center>"); QTextSizeHello("<center>12</center>); this is not code! QTextColorHello("<center>Bold Red</center>"); this is not code! hello.setWindowTitle("My First Qt Program"); QtextSizeWindowTitle("14"); this is not code! QTextColorWindowTitle("Bold Blue"); this is not code! hello.resize(400, 400); hello.show(); return app.exec(); }
The above code is is fake and I am sure very wrong but it is just give an idea of how I would think you should be able to control/set text size and color in the popup window instead of losing the popup window with the other code and the color text defaults into the terminal.
Hope I cleared things up for you.
When I searched the index in QT Creator for "Color Text", it would of been great if instead of those windows showing blank, nothing, for them to say , "Color Text is not supported at this time, or something like that. -
See QLabel::setText() and supported HTML subset.
Enough said about ansi escape sequences. -
@JonB, Thanks for pointing out that QT is not a programming language that explains a lot!
@JonB said in Questions Concerning colorizing text in Ubuntu terminal.:Do you mean you just want to translate the 10 lines of Perl code you wrote above to C++/Qt? I will post that for you if that's what you want (no charge!).
If you will let me except your offer to do that I would really appreciate it!
I would be more than happy to compensate you for doing that!
Just let me know.
Thanks! -
@JonB said in Questions Concerning colorizing text in Ubuntu terminal.:
You are mixing your expectations of what should happen in a terminal versus creating Qt *windows^ and thinking the same code will work there.
You can do what the Perl script does equally from any C or C++ program. Just write the same sequences to stdout, and if you run it from a terminal/Command Prompt it will behave like the Perl script.I thought the same code would work, No, I just like seeing the difference.
A car's engine cannot run on water, it takes gasoline.
But you can see the difference in the two.
The problem with my post is that there are two different subjects and I believe that is where I confused some you guys and started upsetting some people, of which I never meant to do that.
Now that I have figured all this out, you were correct from the beginning.
All I need is the following 8 written in Perl, rewritten in C++.$SIG{__WARN__} = $old; $type = "\e[1m\e[91m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(fatal|fail|error|stop)/i);# bold red $type = "\e[91m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(refused|nodevice|timeout)/i); # red $type = "\e[93m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(reset|warning|secure|unset)/i);# yellow $type = "\e[95m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(add|update|delete)/i); # magenta $type = "\e[96m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(list|uplink)/i); # cyan $type = "\e[94m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(beacon|syncer)/i); # blue $type = "\e[92m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(stat|kfnew)/i); # green $type = "\e[1m\e[92m$type\e[0m" if ($type =~ m/(info|debug)/i); # bold green # print to stdout if enabled print "[$time]\t[$type]\t$msg\n" if $self->{printlog};
Thank you to all who posted and tried to help this old man!
@JonB, I'd be glad to compensate you for doing this, my email address. wpt1114 at yahoo.com
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@Cougar-0
Here are those Perl lines rewritten in C++ + Qt for the reg exs.QString type; type = "This is a fatal message"; //type = "This is a debug message"; if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(fatal|fail|error|stop)"))) type = QString("\e[1m\e[91m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(refused|nodevice|timeout)"))) type = QString("\e[91m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(reset|warning|secure|unset)"))) type = QString("\e[93m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(add|update|delete)"))) type = QString("\e[95m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(list|uplink)"))) type = QString("\e[96m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(beacon|syncer)"))) type = QString("\e[94m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(stat|kfnew)"))) type = QString("\e[92m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(info|debug)"))) type = QString("\e[1m\e[92m%1\e[0m").arg(type); qDebug() << type;
You will need
#include <QRegularExpression>
at the start of your source file. You should put these lines somewhere after the initialQApplication app(argc, argv);
.You will note this is similar to what @SGaist wrote much earlier above. I have stuck to rigidly translating your Perl just as-is.
You have a string variable named
type
. You need to set it to whatever you want before the code (I show a couple of examples), and after the code it has been changed to the original with the colorizing sequences.In practice you will want these lines in some re-usable function, so that the outside world can pass in the desired string for
type
. The function might then output the result string, or it might return that string for use in the caller.The Perl code as translated will not fare well if the input string contains more than one of the words for different colors (e.g.
"This is fatal list info"
), but that is how the Perl code has been written.Finally I would remind you again that this will only show colorized if you send the output to a terminal, e.g. run it as a command-line application in a Windows Command Prompt or Linux xterm. We could adapt this principle to produce, say, a string which you could use on a
QLabel
in a Qt UI application; just it would not use the same escape sequences as you have (we could do text coloring by HTML which is accepted by aQLabel
instead). -
Thanks @JonB, @SGaist , you guys helped me learn a lot!
Which brings me to this.
Now I understand the code you guys gave is for a stand alone program to be ran in terminal.
The code commands the terminal to colorize what words you tell it to.Below is the file from my friends program "MasterServer" , named "logevent.cpp"
#include "logger.h" void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, const QString &message) { // printing to display suppressed? if ( ! _suppressDisplay.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressDisplay.contains("all") ) { QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); logPrimitive() << QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, message) << endl; } // printing to logfile suppressed? if ( ! _suppressLog.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressLog.contains("all") ) { // write message to log QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, message) ); } }
I believe this is the file that can be used to insert the ansi escape sequence code in. That has the correct syntax and will compile and be read by my friends program telling the terminal what color to color certain words if they appear.
My bad example!
void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, const QString &message) ********************************************************************* "INSERT , BUT WITH ALL THE CORRECT CODE /SYNTAX! if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(fatal|fail|error|stop)"))) type = QString("\e[1m\e[91m%1\e[0m").arg(type); if (type.contains(QRegularExpression("(refused|nodevice|timeout)"))) type = QString("\e[91m%1\e[0m").arg(type); @JonB , I am using your rewrite code for this bad example. I must admit when I saw your code and it had "type" in it I knew this file had type in it so I was hoping with a little work (rewrite) it would work, but no luck. Now if anyone can see a better place to insert or the correct way of doing this please by all means have at it! If this cannot be done then It can't be done. ********************************************************************* { // printing to display suppressed? if ( ! _suppressDisplay.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressDisplay.contains("all") ) { QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); logPrimitive() << QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, message) << endl; } // printing to logfile suppressed? if ( ! _suppressLog.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressLog.contains("all") ) { // write message to log QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, message) ); } }
Again I want to thank all who replied and tried to help this old man.
I've learned a lot, I just hope most of you still have most of your hair left!
For me, it's been fun!
Thanks! -
@Cougar-0 said in Questions Concerning colorizing text in Ubuntu terminal.:
@JonB , I am using your rewrite code for this bad example. I must admit when I saw your code and it had "type" in it I knew this file had type in it so I was hoping with a little work (rewrite) it would work, but no luck.
Now if anyone can see a better place to insert or the correct way of doing this please by all means have at it!
If this cannot be done then It can't be done.As I said, I translated the Perl code as-is to do exactly the same.
Here I am guessing the
const QString &message
parameter tologEvent
is the string you want to display/save/pass on with colorizing escape sequences, instead of the original$type
Perl variable or thetype
in the C++. Unlike that example, here we cannot alter theconst QString &message
input parameter because of theconst
. So we shall need a new variable to put the escape sequences in. Just change my code to something like:void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, const QString &message) { QString colorizedMessage(message); if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("(fatal|fail|error|stop)"))) colorizedMessage = QString("\e[1m\e[91m%1\e[0m").arg(colorizedMessage); if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("(refused|nodevice|timeout)"))) colorizedMessage = QString("\e[91m%1\e[0m").arg(colorizedMessage); ... // Now `colorizedMessage` holds the original `message` with any escape sequences // so you can do with it as you will, e.g. // printing to display suppressed? if ( ! _suppressDisplay.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressDisplay.contains("all") ) { QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); logPrimitive() << QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) << endl; } // printing to logfile suppressed? if ( ! _suppressLog.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressLog.contains("all") ) { // write message to log QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) ); } }
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@JonB , used your updated file and it started comping beautifully until,
Logger/logevent.cpp:1:6: error: ‘Logger’ has not been declared 1 | void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, | ^~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:1:29: error: ‘QString’ does not name a type 1 | void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, | ^~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:2:29: error: ‘QString’ does not name a type 2 | const QString &message) | ^~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp: In function ‘void logEvent(const int&, const int&)’: Logger/logevent.cpp:4:5: error: ‘QString’ was not declared in this scope 4 | QString colorizedMessage(message); | ^~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:6:9: error: ‘colorizedMessage’ was not declared in this scope 6 | if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("update"))) | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:6:35: error: ‘QRegularExpression’ was not declared in this scope 6 | if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("update"))) | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:8:9: error: ‘colorizedMessage’ was not declared in this scope 8 | if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("check"))) | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:8:35: error: ‘QRegularExpression’ was not declared in this scope 8 | if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("check"))) | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:10:5: error: expected primary-expression before ‘...’ token 10 | ... | ^~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:21:12: error: ‘_suppressLog’ was not declared in this scope 21 | if ( ! _suppressLog.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressLog.contains("all") ) | ^~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:24:16: error: expected ‘;’ before ‘dateTimeStr’ 24 | QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~ | ; Logger/logevent.cpp:25:23: error: ‘QStringLiteral’ was not declared in this scope 25 | writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) ); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:25:58: error: ‘dateTimeStr’ was not declared in this scope 25 | writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) ); | ^~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:25:84: error: ‘colorizedMessage’ was not declared in this scope 25 | QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) ); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:25:9: error: ‘writeLogFile’ was not declared in this scope 25 | writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) ); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp:2:38: warning: unused parameter ‘message’ [-Wunused-parameter] 2 | const QString &message) | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~ Logger/logevent.cpp: At global scope: Logger/logevent.cpp:29:1: error: expected unqualified-id before numeric constant 29 | 0 | ^ make: *** [Makefile:819: logevent.o] Error 1 cougarxr7@GoneSpy:~/Programs/TestingQt5/MasterServer-Qt5-master/src$
I am beginning to believe we can't get there from here....
Tell me what I did wrong, please. -
@Cougar-0
You were just supposed to replace your existingLogger::logEvent
in:#include "logger.h" void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, const QString &message) {
You have either put this somewhere else, or made some mistake earlier in the file, or something unknown. Nothing in the code I gave you would cause these errors by itself.
Logger/logevent.cpp:1:6: error: ‘Logger’ has not been declared
I believe the
1:6
indicates this is occurring on line #1 of the file. As per the code above which you already had, there will need to be some kind of#include "logger.h"
before this line, maybe you have removed that..... -
@JonB , Success! We have color text!
I now have code to work with and tweek!
Thank you so very much! I learned a lot!!Here is the code;
#include "logger.h" void Logger::logEvent(const QString &messageType, const QString &message) { QString colorizedMessage(message); if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("update"))) { colorizedMessage = QString("\e[1m\e[95m%1\e[0m").arg(colorizedMessage); } if (colorizedMessage.contains(QRegularExpression("check"))) { colorizedMessage = QString("\e[97m%1\e[0m").arg(colorizedMessage); } // Now `colorizedMessage` holds the original `message` with any escape sequences // so you can do with it as you will, e.g. // printing to display suppressed? if ( ! _suppressDisplay.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressDisplay.contains("all") ) { QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); logPrimitive() << QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) << endl; } // printing to logfile suppressed? if ( ! _suppressLog.contains(messageType) and ! _suppressLog.contains("all") ) { // write message to log QString dateTimeStr(QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss:zzz")); writeLogFile( QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, colorizedMessage) ); } }
I noticed it only colored update and not the word check.
Not only update but the whole line is colored!
Now that means I have tweeking to do! -
@Cougar-0 said in Questions Concerning colorizing text in Ubuntu terminal.:
I noticed it only colored update and not the word check.
The word
check
comes in yourmessageType
parameter, not in themessage
parameter which is where theupdate ...
string is. Hence is does not get colorized.You would either have to:
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Subject the
messageType
parameter to the same escape sequence injection as you do on themessage
parameter. That is where factoring the colorizing code into its own function with a parameter would be a very good idea, as shown by @SGaist is his very first response. -
First create the whole string to be output (
QString fullMessage = QStringLiteral("[%1][%2]\t%3").arg(dateTimeStr, messageType, message)
) and then subject thatfullMessage
to the colorization code before outputting it instead of just themessage
.
But I said a long time ago I am not volunteering to write all the code... :)
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I didn't expect you or anyone to write all the code for this, especially for nothing, that is why I offered to pay whoever could help me get this to work.
I don't have the 5 or 6 years left it would take me to learn how to do all this!
I will take it from here....
Thanks for everything!