Spice up your Terminal with colored grep pattern results
Earlier, I came across a post by Garry Dolley, which he shows how to acheive colorized grep matches in bash. I recall having color matches when I used to use Linux on a daily basis as my primary work environment, but haven’t gotten around to setting this up on my MacBook, which is where I do almost all of my development work.
Before
If you don’t already have colors, a grep in your terminal might look something like the following screenshot.
While, I have a very small output here, this gets much crazier when you’re using egrep
across an entire project. It’s hard to scan through all of the results for the inline pattern matches.
So, taking Garry’s suggestion (for bash
), I did something similar with my favorite shell, Z shell.
Add the following to your ~/.zshrc
file to begin experimenting with the colors.
export GREP_OPTIONS='--color=auto'
export GREP_COLOR='1;36'
After
With the new variables defined in my .zshrc
, I can now start to see colors showing up in my grep results.
Pretty cool, huh?
Variants
To save you the trouble of trying tons of combinations yourself, which I suspect you’ll do anyways, here are some other variants.
Blinking
If you change the first number in GREP_COLOR
to 5, you’re matches will !
You’ll have to experiment with this yourself as I’m not going to make a video for you. ;-)
export GREP_COLOR='5;35'
Inverted Colors
You can also invert the colors so that the background color changes on your pattern matches.
For example:
To achieve this, you can set the first number in GREP_COLOR
to 7.
...and so much more
I decided to write a quick and ugly ruby script to iterate through the color combinations that I was trying.
Anyhow, I’ll leave you on that note. If you figure out how to do any other fun things with grep colors, do let me know. :-)