.,-:;//;:=, . :H@@@MM@M#H/.,+%;, ,/X+ +M@@M@MM%=,-%HMMM@X/, -+@MM; $M@@MH+-,;XMMMM@MMMM@+- ;@M@@M- XM@X;, -+XXXXXHHH@M@M#@/. ,%MM@@MH ,@%= .---=-=:=,. =@#@@@MX ., -%HX$$%%%+; =-./@M@M$ .;@MMMM@MM: X@/ -$MM/ .+MM@@@M$ ,@M@H: :@: . =X#@@@@- ,@@@MMX, . /H- ;@M@M= .H@@@@M@+, @MM+..%#$. /MMMM@MMH/. XM@MH; =; /%+%$XHH@$= , .H@@@@MX, .=--------. -%H.,@@@@@MX, .%MM@@@HHHXX$$$%+- .:$MMX =M@@MM%. =XMMM@MM@MM#H;,-+HMM@M+ /MMMX= ,:+$+-,/H#MMMMMMMMM@= =, =++%%%%+/:-.
$ echo 'An useless but fun way to show text-based art!'
Let's revive the ASCII art!
Nincat is community-driven project that loads an ASCII art centred in your terminal.
- Fast as it can be and lightweight.
- Self adapt with the terminal size to print only ASCII arts that fit.
- Supports any external program such as lolcat.
- Supports HEX colour foreground/background arts and 256 colours, 88 colours, 16 colours.
- Skip empty ASCII art files.
- You can select an art directly (by option).
- List all ASCII art's paths (by option).
- Print the name of printed art (by option).
- Modular folder containing the ASCII arts.
Click in Code
in this repository and then Download ZIP
. Extract it using your favourite tool and then in your terminal:
> cd PUT_HERE_THE_PATH_OF_NINCAT
> nincat random
From your terminal, you can clone in your preferred folder:
> git clone 'https://github.com/ninecath/nincat'
> cd nincat
> use ./nincat.nu
> nincat random
That is, when your shell is loaded. There are many shells out there, a very famous one is bash
.
Anyway, all you need to do is add one line in your shell-r that runs nincat, then you'll be able to load it when the terminal opens :)
To verify what shell-rc you should have, run $env.SHELL
or echo $SHELL
(POSIX) in your terminal.
- For
zsh
the rc is put in~/.zshrc
; - For
bash
the rc is put in~/.bashrc
; - For
fish
the config is put in~/.config/fish/config.fish
; - For
nu
the config is put in~/.config/nushell/config.nu
.
> nincat random
Tools that can be used to make easier this type of art can be found on Internet, here's a few of them:
Colours*
Give a look at this site for 256, 88, 16 colours in your ASCII arts.
And obviously, you should utilize \033
instead of \e
.
For RGB colours, I'd recommend this lecture-commentary.
File names are made in this format: <name-of-art>
.
The spaces are important since we use them to rule out what arts should be printed.
The art files are put in the /assets/
. You can make a separate folder to add your own arts. Of course, update the list after with:
$ nincat setup
Please, do not fill all the lines with spaces to close all columns. A good and simple example should be: And do not use tabs, instead you should use spaces.
# Your wonderful username/name and/or extra information about authority (author).
( )
: ) o_o ( :
Please, contribute!
It would be lovely that for every art you add, you add it here, too! Remember to put your name in the first line, so your contribution is never forgotten :)
- By Github's Pull Request (recommended)
Clone this project, add your art in a file in either manually with Github or with git, then send a pull request here comparing both branches.
- By Github's Issue
Create a new issue in the New art
type of issue and put your art there.
- nushell
You can find alternatives in the web, here are some with their initial commits:
- ASCII Art (2013/02);
- ShASCII (2014/05);
- Art Splash Screen (2017/11);
- Inspired by shell-colors-scripts (2018/02);
- TerminalWelcome (2019/03);
- pokemon-colorscripts (2021/08).