Module: Cinch::Formatting
- Defined in:
- lib/cinch/formatting.rb
Overview
This module can be used for adding and removing colors and formatting to/from messages.
The format codes used are those defined by mIRC, which are also the ones supported by most clients.
For usage instructions and examples, see Formatting.format.
List of valid colors
- aqua
- black
- blue
- brown
- green
- grey
- lime
- orange
- pink
- purple
- red
- royal
- silver
- teal
- white
- yellow
List of valid attributes
- bold
- italic
- reverse/reversed
- underline/underlined
Other
- reset (Resets all formatting to the client’s defaults)
Class Method Summary collapse
-
.format(*settings, string) ⇒ String
The formatted string.
-
.unformat(string) ⇒ String
Deletes all mIRC formatting codes from the string.
Class Method Details
.format(*settings, string) ⇒ String
Returns the formatted string.
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# File 'lib/cinch/formatting.rb', line 84 def self.format(*settings, string) string = string.dup attributes = settings.select {|k| Attributes.has_key?(k)}.map {|k| Attributes[k]} colors = settings.select {|k| Colors.has_key?(k)}.map {|k| Colors[k]} if colors.size > 2 raise ArgumentError, "At most two colors (foreground and background) might be specified" end attribute_string = attributes.join color_string = if colors.empty? "" else "\x03#{colors.join(",")}" end prepend = attribute_string + color_string append = Attributes[:reset] # attributes act as toggles, so e.g. underline+underline = no # underline. We thus have to delete all duplicate attributes # from nested strings. string.delete!(attribute_string) # Replace the reset code of nested strings to continue the # formattings of the outer string. string.gsub!(/#{Attributes[:reset]}/, Attributes[:reset] + prepend) return prepend + string + append end |
.unformat(string) ⇒ String
Deletes all mIRC formatting codes from the string. This strips formatting for bold, underline and so on, as well as color codes. This does include removing the numeric arguments.
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# File 'lib/cinch/formatting.rb', line 121 def self.unformat(string) string.gsub(/[\x02\x0f\x16\x1f\x12]|\x03(\d{1,2}(,\d{1,2})?)?/, '') end |