JAEGIS-METHOD-v2.0\v2.1.1\JAEGIS\JAEGIS_Core\JAEGIS-METHOD\node_modules\log-symbols\node_modules\cha
Terminal string styling done right

Info
See yoctocolors for a smaller alternative
Highlights
Expressive API
Highly performant
No dependencies
Ability to nest styles
Auto-detects color support
Doesn't extend
String.prototypeClean and focused
Actively maintained
Used by ~115,000 packages as of July 4, 2024
Install
IMPORTANT: Chalk 5 is ESM. If you want to use Chalk with TypeScript or a build tool, you will probably want to use Chalk 4 for now. Read more.
Usage
Chalk comes with an easy to use composable API where you just chain and nest the styles you want.
Easily define your own themes:
Take advantage of console.log string substitution:
API
chalk.<style>[.<style>...](string, [string...])
<style>[.<style>...](string, [string...])Example: chalk.red.bold.underline('Hello', 'world');
Chain styles and call the last one as a method with a string argument. Order doesn't matter, and later styles take precedent in case of a conflict. This simply means that chalk.red.yellow.green is equivalent to chalk.green.
Multiple arguments will be separated by space.
chalk.level
Specifies the level of color support.
Color support is automatically detected, but you can override it by setting the level property. You should however only do this in your own code as it applies globally to all Chalk consumers.
If you need to change this in a reusable module, create a new instance:
0
All colors disabled
1
Basic color support (16 colors)
2
256 color support
3
Truecolor support (16 million colors)
supportsColor
Detect whether the terminal supports color. Used internally and handled for you, but exposed for convenience.
Can be overridden by the user with the flags --color and --no-color. For situations where using --color is not possible, use the environment variable FORCE_COLOR=1 (level 1), FORCE_COLOR=2 (level 2), or FORCE_COLOR=3 (level 3) to forcefully enable color, or FORCE_COLOR=0 to forcefully disable. The use of FORCE_COLOR overrides all other color support checks.
Explicit 256/Truecolor mode can be enabled using the --color=256 and --color=16m flags, respectively.
chalkStderr and supportsColorStderr
chalkStderr contains a separate instance configured with color support detected for stderr stream instead of stdout. Override rules from supportsColor apply to this too. supportsColorStderr is exposed for convenience.
modifierNames, foregroundColorNames, backgroundColorNames, and colorNames
All supported style strings are exposed as an array of strings for convenience. colorNames is the combination of foregroundColorNames and backgroundColorNames.
This can be useful if you wrap Chalk and need to validate input:
Styles
Modifiers
reset- Reset the current style.bold- Make the text bold.dim- Make the text have lower opacity.italic- Make the text italic. (Not widely supported)underline- Put a horizontal line below the text. (Not widely supported)overline- Put a horizontal line above the text. (Not widely supported)inverse- Invert background and foreground colors.hidden- Print the text but make it invisible.strikethrough- Puts a horizontal line through the center of the text. (Not widely supported)visible- Print the text only when Chalk has a color level above zero. Can be useful for things that are purely cosmetic.
Colors
blackredgreenyellowbluemagentacyanwhiteblackBright(alias:gray,grey)redBrightgreenBrightyellowBrightblueBrightmagentaBrightcyanBrightwhiteBright
Background colors
bgBlackbgRedbgGreenbgYellowbgBluebgMagentabgCyanbgWhitebgBlackBright(alias:bgGray,bgGrey)bgRedBrightbgGreenBrightbgYellowBrightbgBlueBrightbgMagentaBrightbgCyanBrightbgWhiteBright
256 and Truecolor color support
Chalk supports 256 colors and Truecolor (16 million colors) on supported terminal apps.
Colors are downsampled from 16 million RGB values to an ANSI color format that is supported by the terminal emulator (or by specifying {level: n} as a Chalk option). For example, Chalk configured to run at level 1 (basic color support) will downsample an RGB value of #FF0000 (red) to 31 (ANSI escape for red).
Examples:
chalk.hex('#DEADED').underline('Hello, world!')chalk.rgb(15, 100, 204).inverse('Hello!')
Background versions of these models are prefixed with bg and the first level of the module capitalized (e.g. hex for foreground colors and bgHex for background colors).
chalk.bgHex('#DEADED').underline('Hello, world!')chalk.bgRgb(15, 100, 204).inverse('Hello!')
The following color models can be used:
rgb- Example:chalk.rgb(255, 136, 0).bold('Orange!')hex- Example:chalk.hex('#FF8800').bold('Orange!')ansi256- Example:chalk.bgAnsi256(194)('Honeydew, more or less')
Browser support
Since Chrome 69, ANSI escape codes are natively supported in the developer console.
Windows
If you're on Windows, do yourself a favor and use Windows Terminal instead of cmd.exe.
FAQ
Why not switch to a smaller coloring package?
Chalk may be larger, but there is a reason for that. It offers a more user-friendly API, well-documented types, supports millions of colors, and covers edge cases that smaller alternatives miss. Chalk is mature, reliable, and built to last.
But beyond the technical aspects, there's something more critical: trust and long-term maintenance. I have been active in open source for over a decade, and I'm committed to keeping Chalk maintained. Smaller packages might seem appealing now, but there's no guarantee they will be around for the long term, or that they won't become malicious over time.
Chalk is also likely already in your dependency tree (since 100K+ packages depend on it), so switching won’t save space—in fact, it might increase it. npm deduplicates dependencies, so multiple Chalk instances turn into one, but adding another package alongside it will increase your overall size.
If the goal is to clean up the ecosystem, switching away from Chalk won’t even make a dent. The real problem lies with packages that have very deep dependency trees (for example, those including a lot of polyfills). Chalk has no dependencies. It's better to focus on impactful changes rather than minor optimizations.
If absolute package size is important to you, I also maintain yoctocolors, one of the smallest color packages out there.
- Sindre
But the smaller coloring package has benchmarks showing it is faster
Micro-benchmarks are flawed because they measure performance in unrealistic, isolated scenarios, often giving a distorted view of real-world performance. Don't believe marketing fluff. All the coloring packages are more than fast enough.
Related
chalk-template - Tagged template literals support for this module
chalk-cli - CLI for this module
ansi-styles - ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal
supports-color - Detect whether a terminal supports color
strip-ansi - Strip ANSI escape codes
strip-ansi-stream - Strip ANSI escape codes from a stream
has-ansi - Check if a string has ANSI escape codes
ansi-regex - Regular expression for matching ANSI escape codes
wrap-ansi - Wordwrap a string with ANSI escape codes
slice-ansi - Slice a string with ANSI escape codes
color-convert - Converts colors between different models
chalk-animation - Animate strings in the terminal
gradient-string - Apply color gradients to strings
chalk-pipe - Create chalk style schemes with simpler style strings
terminal-link - Create clickable links in the terminal
(Not accepting additional entries)
Maintainers
Last updated