miguel
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2 years ago | |
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README.md | 2 years ago | |
audit.md | 2 years ago |
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> <letters to be colored>
, in which --color
is the flag and <color>
is the color desired by the user and <letters to be colored>
is the letter or letters 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.
- You should be able to choose between coloring a single letter or a set of letters.
- If the letter 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> <letters to be colored> "something"
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