# Rich Rich is a Python library for _rich_ text and advanced formatting to the terminal. Rich provided an easy to use API for colored text (up to 16.7million colors) with bold / italic / underline etc. and a number of more sophisticated formatting options, such as syntax / regex highlighting, emoji, tables, and markdown rendering. Rich is also a _framework_ in that it implements a simple protocol which you may use to make custom objects renderable with advanced terminal formatting. ## Installing Rich may be installed with pip or your favorite PyPi package manager. ``` pip install rich ``` ## Basic Usage The first step to using the rich console is to import and construct the `Console` object. ```python from rich.console import Console console = Console() ``` Most applications will require one `Console` instance. The easiest way to manage your console instance would be to construct an instance at the module level and import it where needed. The Console object has a `print` method which has an intentionally similar interface to the builtin `print` function. Here's an example of use: ``` console.print("Hello", "World!") ``` As you might expect, this will print `"Hello World!"` to the terminal. The only difference from the `print` function is that the output is word-wrapped by default (Rich auto-detects the width of the terminal). There are a few ways of adding color and style to your output. You can set a style for the entire output, by adding a `style` keyword argument. Here's an example: ``` console.print("Hello", "World!", style="bold red") ``` The output will be something like the following:
Hello World! 
That's fine for styling a line of text at a time. For more finely grained styling, Rich renders a special markup which is similar in syntax to [bbcode](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBCode). Here's an example: ```python console.print("Where there is a [b]Will[/b] there is a [i]way[/i].") ```
Where there is a Will there is a way. 
## Emoji Rich supports a simple way of inserting emoji in to terminal output, by using the name of the emoji between two colons. Here's an example: ```python console.print(":smiley: :vampire: :pile_of_poo: :thumbs_up: :raccoon:") ```
😃 🧛 💩 👍 🦝 
Please use this feature wisely.