- ANSI escape code
-
"ANSI code" redirects here. For other uses, see ANSI (disambiguation).
ANSI escape sequences are characters embedded in the text used to control formatting, color, and other output options on video text terminals. Almost all terminal emulators designed to show text output from a remote computer, and (except for Microsoft Windows) to show text output from local software, interpret at least some of the ANSI escape sequences.
Contents
History
Almost all manufacturers of video terminals added vendor-specific escape sequences to do operations such as placing the cursor at arbitrary positions on the screen. As these sequences were all different, elaborate libraries such as termcap had to be created so programs could use the same API for all of them. In addition, most designs required sending numbers (such as row & column) as the binary values of the characters; for some programming languages and for systems that did not use ASCII internally it was often difficult or impossible to turn a number into the correct character.
The first standard for ANSI escape sequences was ECMA-48, adopted in 1976. It was a continuation of a series of character coding standards, the first one being ECMA-6 from 1961, a 7-bit standard from which ASCII originates. ECMA-48 has been updated several times and the current edition is the 5th from 1991. It is also adopted by ISO and IEC as standard ISO/IEC 6429. The name "ANSI escape sequence" dates from 1981 when ANSI adopted ECMA-48 as the standard ANSI X3.64 (and later, in 1997, withdrew it).[1]
The first popular video terminal to support these sequences was the Digital VT100 introduced in 1978.[2], which sparked a variety of "clones," among the earliest and most popular of which was the much more affordable Zenith Z19 in 1979[3]. The popularity of these gradually led to more and more software (especially bulletin board systems) assuming the escape sequences worked, leading to almost all new terminals and emulator programs supporting them.
Support
Most terminal emulators running on Unix-like systems (such as xterm and the OS X Terminal) interpret ANSI escape sequences. The native text console in Linux (the text seen when X is not running) also interprets them. Terminal programs for Microsoft Windows designed to show text from an outside source (a serial port, modem, or socket) also interpret them. Some support for text from local programs on Windows is offered through alternate command processors such as JP Software's 4NT, Michael J. Mefford's ANSI.COM, and Jason Hood's ansicon.
Many Unix applications (e.g. ls, grep, Vim, and Emacs) can generate them, and until 2000 or so[citation needed] this was the primary way they produced their display, even if that display was almost always inside a terminal emulator on a graphics display. Utility programs such as tput output them, as well as in low-level programming libraries, such as termcap or terminfo, or a higher-level library such as curses.
Windows and DOS
MS-DOS 1.0 did not support the ANSI or any other escape sequences. Only a few control characters (CR, LF, BS) were interpreted, making it impossible to do any kind of full-screen application. Any display effects had to be done with BIOS calls (or far more often by directly manipulating the IBM PC hardware).
MS-DOS 2.0 introduced the ability to add a device driver for the ANSI escape sequences – the de facto standard being
ANSI.SYS
, but others likeANSI.COM
[4], andNANSI.SYS
[5] are used as well. Extreme slowness and the fact that it was not installed by default made usage by software almost non-existent; software continued to directly manipulate the hardware to get the text display needed.[citation needed]ANSI.SYS and similar drivers continued to work in through Windows 98, and even in Windows Me, when they were set to native DOS mode (the characters taking the whole screen). ANSI.SYS also worked in NT-derived systems for 16-bit legacy programs executing under the NTVDM.
Console windows in all versions of Windows do not support ANSI escape sequences at all. Software can manipulate the console with ioctl-like Console API interlaced with the text output, for instance:
SetConsoleTextAttribute(ConOut, background|FOREGROUND_RED|FOREGROUND_INTENSITY);
Sequence elements
Escape sequences start with the character ESC (ASCII decimal 27/hex 0x1B/octal 033). For two character sequences the second character is in the range ASCII 64 to 95 (@ to _). Most of the sequences are however more than two characters, and start with the characters ESC and [ (left bracket). This sequence is called CSI for Control Sequence Introducer (or Control Sequence Initiator). The final character of these sequences is in the range ASCII 64 to 126 (@ to ~).
There is a single-character CSI (155/0x9B/0233) as well. The ESC+[ two-character sequence is more often used than the single-character alternative, for details see C0 and C1 control codes. Only the two-character sequence is recognized by devices that support just ASCII (7-bit bytes) or devices that support 8-bit bytes but use the 0x80–0x9F control character range for other purposes. On terminals that use UTF-8 encoding, both forms take 2 bytes, but the two-character sequence is more clear.
Though some encodings use multiple bytes per character, the following discussion is restricted to ASCII characters, and so assumes each character is directly represented by a single-byte.
Non-CSI codes
Note: other C0 codes besides ESC - commonly BEL, BS, CR, LF, FF, TAB, VT, SO, and SI - may produce similar or identical effects to some control sequences when output.
ESC N = SS2, ESC O = SS3 - select a single character from one of the alternate character sets.
ESC ^ = PM, ESC _ = APC - these each take a single string of text, terminated by ST (ESC \ ). They are ignored by xterm
ESC P = DCS: Device control string, ESC ] = OSC: Operating system command - these are similar to CSI, but not limited to integer arguments. Because they are frequently used,[citation needed] in many cases BEL is an acceptable alternative to ST. E.g., in xterm, the window title can be set by: "OSC0;this is the window titleBEL"
Note: pressing special keys on the keyboard, as well as outputting many xterm CSI, DCS, or OSC sequences, often produces a CSI, DCS, or OSC sequence.
CSI codes
The general structure of most ANSI escape sequences is
CSI [private mode characters(s?)] n1 ; n2... [trailing intermediate character(s?)] letter
. The final byte, modified by private mode characters and trailing intermediate characters, specifies the command. The numbers are optional parameters. The default value used for omitted parameters varies with the command, but is usually 1 or 0. If trailing parameters are omitted, the trailing semicolons may also be omitted.The final byte is technically any character in the range 64 to 126 (hex 0x40 to 0x7e, ASCII @ to ~), and may be modified extended with leading intermediate bytes in the range 32 to 47 (hex 0x20 to 0x2f).
The colon (0x3a) is the only character not a part of the general sequence; it was left for future standardization, so any sequence containing it should be ignored. Although multiple private mode characters or trailing intermediates are permitted, there are no such known usages.[citation needed]
If there are any leading private mode characters, the main body of the sequence could theoretically contain any order of characters 0x30 – 0x3f instead of a well-formed semicolon-separated list of numbers,[citation needed] but all known terminals are nice and just use them as a flag.[citation needed] Sequences are also private if the final byte is in the range 112 to 126 (hex 0x70 to 0x7e, ASCII p to ~).
Examples of private escape codes include the DECTCEM (DEC text cursor enable mode) shown below. It was first introduced for the VT-300 series of video terminals.
The existence of a C0 control, DEL (0x7f), or a high characters is undefined.[clarification needed] Typically, implementations will either cancel the sequence or execute the control and then continue parsing the CSI sequence.[clarification needed]
Some ANSI escape sequences (not a complete list) Code Name Effect CSI n A CUU – CUrsor Up Moves the cursor n (default 1) cells in the given direction. If the cursor is already at the edge of the screen, this has no effect. CSI n B CUD – CUrsor Down CSI n C CUF – CUrsor Forward CSI n D CUB – CUrsor Back CSI n E CNL – Cursor Next Line Moves cursor to beginning of the line n (default 1) lines down. CSI n F CPL – Cursor Previous Line Moves cursor to beginning of the line n (default 1) lines up. CSI n G CHA – Cursor Horizontal Absolute Moves the cursor to column n. CSI n ; m H CUP – CUrsor Position Moves the cursor to row n, column m. The values are 1-based, and default to 1 (top left corner) if omitted. A sequence such as CSI ;5H is a synonym for CSI 1;5H as well as CSI 17;H is the same as CSI 17H and CSI 17;1H CSI n J ED – Erase Data Clears part of the screen. If n is zero (or missing), clear from cursor to end of screen. If n is one, clear from cursor to beginning of the screen. If n is two, clear entire screen (and moves cursor to upper left on MS-DOS ANSI.SYS). CSI n K EL – Erase in Line Erases part of the line. If n is zero (or missing), clear from cursor to the end of the line. If n is one, clear from cursor to beginning of the line. If n is two, clear entire line. Cursor position does not change. CSI n S SU – Scroll Up Scroll whole page up by n (default 1) lines. New lines are added at the bottom. (not ANSI.SYS) CSI n T SD – Scroll Down Scroll whole page down by n (default 1) lines. New lines are added at the top. (not ANSI.SYS) CSI n ; m f HVP – Horizontal and Vertical Position Moves the cursor to row n, column m. Both default to 1 if omitted. Same as CUP CSI n [;k] m SGR – Select Graphic Rendition Sets SGR parameters, including text color. After CSI can be zero or more parameters separated with ;. With no parameters, CSI m is treated as CSI 0 m (reset / normal), which is typical of most of the ANSI escape sequences. CSI 6 n DSR – Device Status Report Reports the cursor position to the application as (as though typed at the keyboard) ESC[n;mR, where n is the row and m is the column. (May not work on MS-DOS.) CSI s SCP – Save Cursor Position Saves the cursor position. CSI u RCP – Restore Cursor Position Restores the cursor position. CSI ?25l DECTCEM Hides the cursor. (Note: the trailing character is lowercase L.) CSI ?25h DECTCEM Shows the cursor. SGR (Select Graphic Rendition) parameters Code Effect Note 0 Reset / Normal all attributes off 1 Bright (increased intensity) or Bold 2 Faint (decreased intensity) not widely supported 3 Italic: on not widely supported. Sometimes treated as inverse. 4 Underline: Single 5 Blink: Slow less than 150 per minute 6 Blink: Rapid MS-DOS ANSI.SYS; 150 per minute or more; not widely supported 7 Image: Negative inverse or reverse; swap foreground and background 8 Conceal not widely supported 9 Crossed-out Characters legible, but marked for deletion. Not widely supported. 10 Primary(default) font 11–19 n-th alternate font Select the n-th alternate font. 14 being the fourth alternate font, up to 19 being the 9th alternate font. 20 Fraktur hardly ever supported 21 Bright/Bold: off or Underline: Double bold off not widely supported, double underline hardly ever 22 Normal color or intensity neither bright, bold nor faint 23 Not italic, not Fraktur 24 Underline: None not singly or doubly underlined 25 Blink: off 26 Reserved 27 Image: Positive 28 Reveal conceal off 29 Not crossed out 30–37 Set text color 30 + x, where x is from the color table below 38 Set xterm-256 text color[dubious ] next arguments are 5;x where x is color index (0..255) 39 Default text color implementation defined (according to standard) 40–47 Set background color 40 + x, where x is from the color table below 48 Set xterm-256 background color next arguments are 5;x where x is color index (0..255) 49 Default background color implementation defined (according to standard) 50 Reserved 51 Framed 52 Encircled 53 Overlined 54 Not framed or encircled 55 Not overlined 56–59 Reserved 60 ideogram underline or right side line hardly ever supported 61 ideogram double underline or double line on the right side hardly ever supported 62 ideogram overline or left side line hardly ever supported 63 ideogram double overline or double line on the left side hardly ever supported 64 ideogram stress marking hardly ever supported 90–99 Set foreground color, high intensity aixterm (not in standard) 100–109 Set background color, high intensity aixterm (not in standard) Colors
Text color is manipulated using CSI n [;k] m sequence.
Color table[6] Intensity 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Normal Black Red Green Yellow[7] Blue Magenta Cyan White Bright Black Red Green Yellow Blue Magenta Cyan White There are two other color standards CSS/HTML standard colors and X Window colors which standardize both the color names and associated RGB color values, but the escape sequence standard only specifies the color names, not RGB values. The chart below shows default RGB assignments for some common terminal programs, together with the CSS and the X-Window colors for these color names.[citation needed]
Standard VGA colors Windows XP
command promptTerminal.app PuTTY xterm CSS/HTML X Window normal black 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0 red 170, 0, 0 128, 0, 0 194, 54, 33 187, 0, 0 205, 0, 0 255, 0, 0 255, 0, 0 green 0, 170, 0 0, 128, 0 37, 188, 36 0, 187, 0 0, 205, 0 0, 255, 0 0, 128, 0 brown/yellow 170, 85, 0 128, 128, 0 173, 173, 39 187, 187, 0 205, 205, 0 255, 255, 0 255, 255, 0 blue 0, 0, 170 0, 0, 128 73, 46, 225 0, 0, 187 0, 0, 238 0, 0, 255 0, 0, 255 magenta 170, 0, 170 128, 0, 128 211, 56, 211 187, 0, 187 205, 0, 205 255, 0, 255 255, 0, 255 cyan 0, 170, 170 0, 128, 128 51, 187, 200 0, 187, 187 0, 205, 205 0, 255, 255 0, 255, 255 gray 170, 170, 170 192, 192, 192 203, 204, 205 187, 187, 187 229, 229, 229 255, 255, 255 255, 255, 255 bright/light darkgray 85, 85, 85 128, 128, 128 129, 131, 131 85, 85, 85 127, 127, 127 red 255, 85, 85 255, 0, 0 252,57,31 255, 85, 85 255, 0, 0 green 85, 255, 85 0, 255, 0 49, 231, 34 85, 255, 85 0, 255, 0 144, 238, 144 144, 238, 144 yellow 255, 255, 85 255, 255, 0 234, 236, 35 255, 255, 85 255, 255, 0 255, 255, 224 225, 255, 224 blue 85, 85, 255 0, 0, 255 88, 51, 255 85, 85, 255 92, 92, 255 173, 216, 230 173, 216, 230 magenta 255, 85, 255 255, 0, 255 249, 53, 248 255, 85, 255 255, 0, 255 cyan 85, 255, 255 0, 255, 255 20, 240, 240 85, 255, 255 0, 255, 255 224, 255, 255 224, 255, 255 white 255, 255, 255 255, 255, 255 233, 235, 235 255, 255, 255 255, 255, 255 The VGA column denotes the typical colors that are used when booting PCs and leaving them in their classical 80×25 text mode. The colors are different in the EGA/VGA graphic modes.
In July 2004 the blue colors of xterm changed,[8] RGB (0,0,205) --> (0,0,238) for normal and (0,0,255) --> (92,92,255) for bright. As of 2010 old xterm versions still linger on many computers though.
Examples
CSI 2 J
— This clears the screen and, on some devices, locates the cursor to the y,x position 1,1 (upper left corner).CSI 32 m
— This makes text green. On MS-DOS, normally the green would be dark, dull green, so you may wish to enable Bold with the sequenceCSI 1 m
which would make it bright green, or combined asCSI 32 ; 1 m
. MS-DOS ANSI.SYS uses the Bold state to make the character Bright; also the Blink state can be set (viaINT 10, AX 1003h, BL 00h
) to render the Background in the Bright mode. MS-DOS ANSI.SYS does not support SGR codes 90–97 and 100–107 directly.CSI 0 ; 6 8 ; "DIR" ; 13 p
— This re-assigns the key F10 to send to the keyboard buffer the string "DIR" and ENTER, which in the DOS command line would display the contents of the current directory. (MS-DOS ANSI.SYS only) This is a private-use code (as indicated by the letter p), using a non-standard extension to include a string-valued parameter. Following the letter of the standard would consider the sequence to end at the letter D.CSI s
— This saves the cursor position. Using the sequenceCSI u
will restore it to the position. Say the current cursor position is 7(y) and 10(x). The sequenceCSI s
will save those two numbers. Now you can move to a different cursor position, such as 20(y) and 3(x), using the sequenceCSI 20 ; 3 H
orCSI 20 ; 3 f
. Now if you use the sequence CSI u the cursor position will return to 7(y) and 10(x). Some terminals require the DEC sequencesESC 7
/ESC 8
instead which is more widely supported.Example of use in shell scripting
ANSI escape codes are often used in UNIX and UNIX-like terminals to provide syntax highlighting. For example, on compatible terminals, the following list command colour-codes file and directory names by type.
ls --color=always
Users can employ escape codes in their scripts by including them as part of standard output or standard error. For example, the following sed command embellishes the output of the make command by displaying lines containing words starting with "ERR" in reverse video, and words starting with "WARN" in bold (letter case is ignored).
make 2>&1 | sed -e 's/.*\bERR.*/\x1b[7m&\x1b[0m/i' -e 's/.*\bWARN.*/\x1b[1m&\x1b[0m/i'
The representations of the codes are highlighted.[9]
Illegal and ambiguous sequences in use
- The Linux console uses
OSC P n rr gg bb
to change the palette, which, if hard-coded into an application, may hang other terminals. However, appendingST
will be ignored by Linux and form a proper, ignorable sequence for other terminals. - On the Linux console, certain function keys generate sequences of the form
CSI [ char
. The CSI sequence should terminate on the [. - Old versions of Terminator generates
SS3 1; modifiers char
when F1–F4 are pressed with modifiers. The faulty behavior was copied from GNOME Terminal.[citation needed] - xterm replies
CSI row ; column R
if asked for cursor position andCSI 1 ; modifiers R
if the F3 key is pressed with modifiers, which collide in the case of row == 1. This can be avoided by using the ? private modifier, which will be reflected in the response.[clarification needed] - many terminals prepend
ESC
to any character that is typed with the alt key down. This creates ambiguity for uppercase letters and symbols @[\]^_, which would form C1 codes.[clarification needed] - Konsole generates
SS3 modifiers char
when F1–F4 are pressed with modifiers.[clarification needed]
See also
- ANSI art
- Control character
- Advanced Video Attribute Terminal Assembler and Recreator (AVATAR)
Notes
- ^ See this NIST list of withdrawn standards
- ^ Paul Williams (2006). "Digital's Video Terminals". VT100.net. http://vt100.net/vt_history. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
- ^ Heathit Company (1979). "Heathkit Catalog 1979". Heathit Company. http://www.pestingers.net/Computer_history/Computers_79.htm. Retrieved 4 November 2011.
- ^ Michael Mefford (1989-02-07). "ANSI.com: Download It Here". PC Magazine. http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,5343,00.asp. Retrieved 2011-08-10.
- ^ Dan Kegel, Eric Auer (1999-02-28). "Nansi and NNansi - ANSI Drivers for MS-DOS". Dan Kegel's Web Hostel. http://www.kegel.com/nansi/. Retrieved 2011-08-10.
- ^ The names are standard, however the exact shade/hue/value of colors are not standardized and will depend on the device used to display them.
- ^ On terminals based on CGA compatible hardware, such as ANSI.SYS running on DOS, this normal intensity foreground color is rendered as Orange. CGA RGBI monitors contained hardware to modify the dark yellow color to an orange/brown color by reducing the green component. See this ansi art as an example.
- ^ "Patch #192 - 2004/7/12 - XFree86 4.4.99.9". http://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.log.html#xterm_192.
- ^ Colorized shell echo
External links
- Standard ECMA-48, Control Functions For Coded Character Sets. (5th edition, June 1991), European Computer Manufacturers Association, Geneva 1991 (also published by ISO and IEC as standard ISO/IEC 6429)
- ANSI.SYS -- ansi terminal emulation escape sequences
- Xterm / Escape Sequences
- AIXterm / Escape Sequences
- A collection of escape sequences for terminals that are vaguely compliant with ECMA-48 and friends.
- ANSI Escape Sequences
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to
99991 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 9 · 16 · 31 (-0, -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9, -10, -11, -12, -13) · 128 · 216 · 217 · 226 · 228 · 233 · 259 · 269 · 302 · 306 · 428 · 518 · 519 · 639 (-1, -2, -3, -5, -6) · 646 · 690 · 732 · 764 · 843 · 898 · 1000 · 1004 · 1007 · 1073-1 · 1413 · 1538 · 1745 · 2014 · 2015 · 2022 · 2108 · 2145 · 2146 · 2240 · 2281 · 2709 · 2711 · 2788 · 3029 · 3103 · 3166 (-1, -2, -3) · 3297 · 3307 · 3602 · 3864 · 3901 · 3977 · 4031 · 4157 · 4217 · 5218 · 5775 · 5776 · 5800 · 5964 · 6166 · 6344 · 6346 · 6425 · 6429 · 6438 · 6523 · 6709 · 7001 · 7002 · 7098 · 7185 · 7200 · 7498 · 7736 · 7810 · 7811 · 7812 · 7813 · 7816 · 8000 · 8178 · 8217 · 8571 · 8583 · 8601 · 8632 · 8652 · 8691 · 8807 · 8820-5 · 8859 (-1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9, -10, -11, -12, -13, -14, -15, -16) · 8879 · 9000/9001 · 9075 · 9126 · 9241 · 9362 · 9407 · 9506 · 9529 · 9564 · 9594 · 9660 · 9897 · 9945 · 9984 · 9985 · 999510000
to
1999910006 · 10118-3 · 10160 · 10161 · 10165 · 10179 · 10206 · 10303 (-11, -21, -22, -28, -238) · 10383 · 10487 · 10585 · 10589 · 10646 · 10664 · 10746 · 10861 · 10957 · 10962 · 10967 · 11073 · 11170 · 11179 · 11404 · 11544 · 11783 · 11784 · 11785 · 11801 · 11898 · 11940 · 11941 · 11941 (TR) · 11992 · 12006 · 12182:1998 · 12207 · 12234-2 · 13211 (-1, -2) · 13216 · 13250 · 13399 · 13406-2 · 13407 · 13450 · 13485 · 13490 · 13567 · 13568 · 13584 · 13616 · 14000 · 14031 · 14396 · 14443 · 14496-10 · 14496-14 · 14644 (-1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9) · 14649 · 14651 · 14698 · 14698-2 · 14750 · 14882 · 14971 · 15022 · 15189 · 15288 · 15291 · 15292 · 15408 · 15444 · 15445 · 15438 · 15504 · 15511 · 15686 · 15693 · 15706 · 15706-2 · 15707 · 15897 · 15919 · 15924 · 15926 · 15926 WIP · 15930 · 16023 · 16262 · 16750 · 17024 · 17025 · 17369 · 17799 · 18000 · 18004 · 18014 · 18245 · 18629 · 18916 · 19005 · 19011 · 19092-1 · 19092-2 · 19114 · 19115 · 19125 · 19136 · 19439 · 19501:2005 · 19752 · 19757 · 19770 · 19775-1 · 19794-520000+ See also: All articles beginning with "ISO" Categories:- Computer standards
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- The Linux console uses
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