On Feb 2, 1:38 pm, rzed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote innews:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > > > > On Feb 2, 1:16 pm, rzed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote > >> innews:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > >> > Hi, > > >> > I'm interested in printing out coloured lines of my > >> > application and > >> > I don't know what to use. Can anybody give me an idea?? > > >> You could speed up the process if you explain what your > >> application is and what you mean by colored lines. Does your > >> application emit output to a plotter, an ink-jet printer, or a > >> color laser printer? Is it a drawing program? An editor in > >> which you want lines colored to highlight context? It might be > >> useful to know what system you are running as well. Just a > >> little detail here. > > >> -- > >> rzed > > > Well, yes, it's a program that prints out lines to the standard > > output with a print command, and I want to print them coloured. > > For example: > > > print "Hello World!!" > > > I want it in red colour. > > > That's all. > > If you're on Linux, you could use the curses module. There may be > a precompiled Windows version compatible with your Python version, > or maybe not, but the Windows source is available, and you may be > able to get it to work with your Python with some effort. Linux > distros include curses, I think. For Windows curses, take a look > at <http://adamv.com/dev/python/curses/>. You will understand why > the phrase "Windows curses" is used, I expect. > > -- > rzed
Yes, I'm on a Linux box. I've tried with the curses module, but I don't how I could fetch the current use of curses of my shell. I don't know if I'm talking about something impossible. I've made some tests with the curses module and works fine, but I need to capture the current window and change the attributes of texts. Carlos Niharra López -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list