console2
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3.0.2 • Public • Published

console2

Massively extends the console features to produce human readable output. Provides content boxes using ASCII box-drawing characters, improvements for the output of object inspections (using tables), stack traces and more. It can even beep!

Screenshot of console.help

Features

  • Structured output using ASCII box-draing characters
  • Fully compatible to the system console
  • Improved object inspection (pretty nice tables)
  • Improved stack traces
  • Improved timer
  • Ability to nest boxes
  • Additional console features
  • Various formatting shortcuts
  • Clean and focused
  • Intelligent use of colors to make contents even more distinguishable

Install

$ npm install --save console2

Quick Start

Have a screenshot of the output.

const console2 = require('console2')()
console2.help()

Usage

Console2 integrates seamlessly into the node console. However, you should make yourself familiar with the additional features, especially box, line, over & out.

const console2 = require('console2')()

// log a string
console2.log("They're minerals! Jesus Christ, Marie.")
// as you know and love it, native methods are fully supported

// logs a string "the new way"
console2.line("You shall not pass (immediately)")
// this queues your string until you call "console.out"
// read more on this below

// insert empty line & start a timer
console2.spacer().time('Timer1')

// build a box - returns a new console instance
const box = console2.box('I am a child.')

// add a line to our new box
box.line('I am the 2nd line of the sub box!')

// indicate that the box can be printed and there will be no more lines/boxes appended to it
box.over()

// insert empty line & print timer
console2.spacer().time('Timer1')

// make noise
console2.beep()

// print everything, this exists because most actions are async
console2.out()

Result

Managing boxes. Over and Out.

The main feature is the generation of easy-to-read ASCII box-drawing character sections - short: boxes.

// returns a new console instance which acts as a child box
var box = console.box()

These boxes are 2 dimensional (meaning they depend on the previous / following lines), you can no longer just stdout a line when building a box. Doing so would result in a big mess of lines without any context to each other, because of the nature of time. Imagine you want to log the process of updating a database inside a single box, whilst complimenting yourself:

box.log('Trying database update')
setTimeout(function mimicDatabaseUpdate(){
   box.log('Database updated')
}, 1)
console.log('You look gorgeous!')

// expected output:
// ├ You look gorgeous
// ├─ Starting database update
// └─ Database updated

// actual output:
// ├─ Starting database update
// ├ You look gorgeous
// └─ Database updated

"Houston we have a problem."

As you see, you need to wait until you are done adding new lines before you can print a box. The solution is simple: We queue stuff. Instead of console.log, use console.line. It does the same thing, except for calling stdout (it's not printing the line).

box.line('Trying database update')
setTimeout(function mimicDatabaseUpdate(){
   box.line('Database updated')
}, 1)
console.log('You look gorgeous!')

But now there's only the part where I compliment myself? Right, here's what happened: You've added a line, then printed everything that's ready (console.log did that) and finally added another line to your box. But you didn't mark the box as over / ready and therefore console2 thinks you might want to add more lines.

"No you don't. Over and out!"

   // ...
   box.line('Database updated').out()
   // ..

By calling console.out() (or in this case box.out()) you tell the parent of all boxes to print every child box that's ready.

Pro-Tip: out can take the same arguments as line does. So you could simplify the above to: box.out('Database updated').

"And what about over? Over."

You might run into situations where you want to mark a box as printable but don't want to print everything. For example when you're working on multiple child-boxes at once: you have to wait until every child box is done, before you can output the whole thing. That's what box.over is for:

const box = console2.box('I am a box with children')
const child1 = box.box('I am child #1')
const child2 = box.box('I am child #2')

async.each(arr, (data, callback) => {
  child1.line('Processing item #1:', data)
}, () => child1.over())

// you don't know if i'm faster or slower than the onEnd above!
setTimeout(() => child2.line('Hello friend').over(), 123)

// out .out() to print queued lines
function print(){
  console2.out('Additional output')
}

Pro-Tip: over can take the same arguments as line does. So you could simplify the above to: box.over('Hello friend').

Reference

Console2 not only improves the native console functions (log, info, warn, error, dir, time, timeEnd, trace) but also provides additional functions.


console2.help()

Displays a short tutorial with examples.


console2.box(content, option)

Create a sub box.


console2.line({...*}[, option])

Add a line.


console2.over({...*}[, option])

Adds a line and sets the option {over:true}


console2.out({...*}[, option])

Flush current buffer (use this to actually see something).


console2.spacer()

Flush current buffer + adds an empty line.


console2.log({...*}[, option])

Same as console.line but with an additional call to console.out to remain compatible to the native console.


console2.title({String} line)

Creates a title by adding two lines (above & below) the text.


console2.beep({String} [label])

Makes your terminal beep, outputs beep: label.


console2.time({String} [label], {Boolean} [reset])

Useful stopwatch that shows the elapsed time in a readable format (ms + years, months, days...). When called twice, the time in between the two calls is also measured & displayed!

// Prints time since box was initialized
console2.time()

// (1st call) starts a new timer, outputs 'Timer1: start'
console2.time('Timer1')

// (1st call) same as above, no output
console2.time('Timer1', true)

// (2nd call) outputs 'Timer1: Xms'
console2.time('Timer1')

// (2nd call) outputs 'Timer1: Xms - reset', resets the timer
console2.time('Timer1', true)

console2.trace({String} [label])

Beautified console.trace.


console2.build(stripLevels=0, useParent=false)

Returns a promise with the output of console.out() as a string.


console2.options({Object|String|Number} data)

Option Type Default Help
color String grey Primary color
colorText String grey Text color
border Number 1 Vertical border-width: 1 () or 2 ()
console Object console Object to receive the output of console2.out.
Needs to have the same properties as the console.
map Array [['...','…']] Simple replace for input strings (e.g. ... to a single char )
isWorker Boolean false Act as a worker
over Boolean false Allow output of box when a parent uses out()
disableAutoOut Boolean false Console2 tries to detect whether to automatically call
console.out after new lines have been added.
override Boolean false Whether to override the native console.
Can only be set when first calling the main function.

Shortcuts

  • 1, 2 ⇔ sets {border:Number}
  • chalk color or command (see console.col) ⇔ sets {color:String,colorText::String}

console2.col({String} input, {...String} color)

Colorizes the input, can take multiple colors / commands (see module chalk).

  • Colors: cyan, green, yellow, red, magenta, blue, white, grey, black
  • Backgrounds: bgCyan, bgGreen, bgYellow, bgRed, bgMagenta, bgBlue, bgWhite, bgGrey, bgBlack
  • Commands: bold (bright color), dim (dark color), italic (bad support), underline (bad support), inverse, hidden, strikethrough (bad support)
  • Specials: rainbow, zebra, code

Use to colorize a string before adding it:

console2.log(
    console.col('I am a rainbow!', 'rainbow')
)

console2.strip({String} input)

Removes any ansi codes from the input string (see module chalk).


console2.pad({String} padSymbol, {Number} length, {Number} [str], {Boolean} [useLeftSide])

Note: pad will be deprecated, use String.padStart or String.padEnd instead.

Utility to generate a pad string when working with aligned texts.

console.pad('-', 5)                 // = '-----'
console.pad('.', 7, 'Hello')        // = 'Hello..'
console.pad(' ', 7, 'Hello', true)  // = '  Hello'

Aliases

Alias exist to cover features of the native console or to provide shortcuts for lazy people like me.

Shortcut Alias
console ._ console .line
console .info console .log (green)
console .warn console .log (yellow)
console .error console .log (red)
console .dir console .log
console .timeEnd console .time
console .ok console .time('OK').out()

Overriding the native console

You can enable overriding of the native console by passing true into the main function or by using console2.options({override: true}).

var console2 = require('console2')(false) // "false" is a shortcut for the option {override:false}
console2.title('Hello World')

Thanks to

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Install

npm i console2

Weekly Downloads

2

Version

3.0.2

License

MIT

Unpacked Size

195 kB

Total Files

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Collaborators

  • riennevaplus