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README.md
ascii-art-color
Objectives
You must follow the same instructions as in the first subject but this time with colors.
The output should manipulate colors using the flag --color=<color> <substring to be colored>
, in which --color
is the flag and <color>
is the color desired by the user and <substring to be colored>
is the substring that you can chose to be colored. These colors can be achieved using different notations (color code systems, like RGB
, hsl
, ANSI
...), it is up to you to choose which one you want to use.
- The substring to be colored can be a single letter or more
- If the substring is not specified, the whole
string
should be colored. - The flag must have exactly the same format as above, any other formats must return the following usage message:
Usage: go run . [OPTION] [STRING]
EX: go run . --color=<color> <substring to be colored> "something"
Usage
$ go run . --color=red kit "a king kitten have kit"
For the example above, the substring kit
in the word kitten
and the word kit
at the end should be colored.
If there are other ascii-art
optional projects implemented, the program should accept other correctly formatted [OPTION]
and/or [BANNER]
.
Additionally, the program must still be able to run with a single [STRING]
argument.
Instructions
- Your project must be written in Go.
- The code must respect the good practices.
- It is recommended to have test files for unit testing.
Allowed packages
- Only the standard Go packages are allowed
This project will help you learn about :
- The Go file system(fs) API
- Color converters
- Data manipulation
- Terminal display