Colorama for Python, Not returning colored print l

2020-01-29 10:01发布

问题:

I've installed colorama for python. I've imported the module as follows:

import colorama
from colorama import init
init()
from colorama import Fore, Back, Style

print Fore.RED + "My Text is Red"

and it returns the ANSI charaters....

esc[31mMy Text is Red

This isn`t what I expected. Am I doing something wrong.

Thanks.

回答1:

I had this same issue on Windows 7 x64, I finally got the colors working without having to install anything new just by adding the argument convert=True to the init call.

from colorama import init, Fore, Back, Style

init(convert=True)

print(Fore.RED + 'some red text')


回答2:

I've never had success getting colors working in Windows cmd.exe without patching it with Ansicon. After patching, ANSI color codes will work without needing to use something like colorama (which didn't work for me either).

To patch cmd.exe with Ansicon, do the following:

  1. Download Ansicon from https://github.com/adoxa/ansicon/downloads and unzip it into a directory with no spaces
  2. Use a cmd prompt and navigate to where you unzipped it.
  3. CD into the x64 directory (unless you have a 32bit machine, then use the x86 one)
  4. Type ansicon.exe –i
  5. Open a new cmd prompt

via: https://stackoverflow.com/a/4749307/191902

Also, if you have an NVidia graphics card, you might need to set the environment variable "ANSICON_EXC" to "nvd3d9wrap.dll".



回答3:

I know I'm late, but this will hopefully help anyone still looking for the answer.

Stating from Colorama's documentation on PyPI:

Colorama can be used happily in conjunction with existing ANSI libraries such as Termcolor

from colorama import init
from termcolor import colored

# use Colorama to make Termcolor work on Windows too
init()

# then use Termcolor for all colored text output
print(colored('Hello, World!', 'green', 'on_red'))

This worked for me, on Anaconda Prompt (essentially cmd.exe) on Windows 10 64-bit.

Colorama's native ANSI sequences don't seem to work for some reason. An external ANSI library (i.e. Termcolor) did the trick for me.



回答4:

That's normal because you do not have ANSI on Windows.

Try somehting like tendo.colorer and this will enable coloring for all platforms.

Note: tendo.colorer adds coloring to the logs, but I'm sure you will figure it out on how to use it for other things. If I'm not mistaking just importing it before your code it will fix the problem.



回答5:

you can use the import only one import. such as:

from colorama import init, Fore, Back, Style

init()

and you can try it now :

print(Fore.RED + 'some red text')
print(Back.GREEN + 'and with a green background')
print(Style.DIM + 'and in dim text')
print(Fore.RESET + Back.RESET + Style.RESET_ALL)


回答6:

Try The following:

import colorama

colorama.init()
print colorama.Fore.GREEN + " Hey, im green! "