I frequently pipe the output of Terminal.app commands to view/search with TextMate, but for commands like "ls -al --color=always" I'd like to still see the ANSI terminal colors even though I keep the piped output in Textmate for future reference.
So something like % echo -e "\e[0;32mCOLOR_GREEN\t\e[1;32mCOLOR_LIGHT_GREEN\e[0m" would show up (colored) in TextMate as COLOR_GREEN COLOR_LIGHT_GREEN It'd be fine if the actual escape codes were still there but de-emphasized.
If nothing else, it would save me from running a regex through search/replace to remove the ANSI escape codes when my output already took a while to generate. And I like the "do it once, keep it forever" factor of a TextMate bundle ;)
If there's any existing bundle which has those codes already in a language grammar, I'd appreciate it.
Thanks Darryl
ls example: total 8.0K -rwx--x--x 1 dzurnlocal 515 2010-04-14 16:16 [0m[01;32mcolors.sh[0m* lrwxr-xr-x 1 root 9 2007-07-05 10:06 [01;36m2-sym_link[0m -> [01;33m/dev/null[0m brw-r--r-- 1 root 14, 0 2006-06-09 15:38 [01;33m6-block_special[0m crw-r--r-- 1 root 3, 2 2006-06-09 15:38 [01;33m7-char_special[0m -rw-r--r-- 1 dzurnlocal 0 2006-06-09 15:38 0-file drwxr-xr-x 2 dzurnlocal 68 2006-06-09 15:38 [01;34m1-directory[0m/ -rwxrwxrwx 1 dzurnlocal 0 2006-06-09 15:38 [01;32m5-executable[0m* -rwsrwxrwx 1 dzurnlocal 0 2006-06-09 15:38 [37;41m8-exe_setuid[0m* -rwxrwsrwx 1 dzurnlocal 0 2006-06-09 15:38 [30;43m9-exe_setgid[0m* drwxrwxrwt 2 dzurnlocal 68 2006-06-09 15:38 [30;42ma-dir_writeothers_sticky[0m/ drwxrwxrwx 2 dzurnlocal 68 2006-06-09 15:38 [34;42mb-dir_writeothers_NOsticky[0m/