Jia-Luo
Jia-Luo

Reputation: 3293

How can I print bold text in Python?

E.g:

print "hello"

What should I do to make the text "hello" bold?

Upvotes: 286

Views: 728238

Answers (18)

bozorgzad.ai
bozorgzad.ai

Reputation: 524

Only these codes worked for me in 'Windows command prompt (CMD)' with python '3.10.14'

start_bold = "\u001b[1m"
end_bold = "\033[0m"

import os
os.system("color")

color = {
    "ENDC": end_bold,
    "Bold": start_bold,
}

print(start_bold + "test" + end_bold)

Upvotes: 0

aayoubi
aayoubi

Reputation: 12069

You can rely on ANSI escape codes if your terminal supports them:

>>> start = "\033[1m"
>>> end = "\033[0;0m"
>>> print "The" + start + "text" + end + " is bold."
The text is bold.

The word text will be bold when printed.

Upvotes: 36

Aristide
Aristide

Reputation: 3984

A simple approach relies on Unicode Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols.

Code

def bold(
    text,
    trans=str.maketrans(
        "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789",
        "๐—”๐—•๐—–๐——๐—˜๐—™๐—š๐—›๐—œ๐—๐—ž๐—Ÿ๐— ๐—ก๐—ข๐—ฃ๐—ค๐—ฅ๐—ฆ๐—ง๐—จ๐—ฉ๐—ช๐—ซ๐—ฌ๐—ญ๐—ฎ๐—ฏ๐—ฐ๐—ฑ๐—ฒ๐—ณ๐—ด๐—ต๐—ถ๐—ท๐—ธ๐—น๐—บ๐—ป๐—ผ๐—ฝ๐—พ๐—ฟ๐˜€๐˜๐˜‚๐˜ƒ๐˜„๐˜…๐˜†๐˜‡๐Ÿฌ๐Ÿญ๐Ÿฎ๐Ÿฏ๐Ÿฐ๐Ÿฑ๐Ÿฒ๐Ÿณ๐Ÿด๐Ÿต",
    ),
):
    return text.translate(trans)

Example

assert bold("Hello world") == "๐—›๐—ฒ๐—น๐—น๐—ผ ๐˜„๐—ผ๐—ฟ๐—น๐—ฑ"

Discussion

Several pros and cons I can think of. Feel free to add yours in the comments.

Advantages:

  • As short as readable.
  • No external library.
  • Portable: can be used for instance to highlight sections in an ipywidgets Dropdown.
  • Extensible to italics, etc. with the appropriate translation tables.
  • Language agnostic: the same technique can be implemented in any programming language.

Drawbacks:

  • Requires Unicode support and a font where all the required glyphs are defined. This should be ok on any reasonably modern system, though.
  • No copy-pasteย : produces a faux-text. Note that '๐˜„๐—ผ๐—ฟ๐—น๐—ฑ'.isalpha() is still True, though.
  • No diacritics.

Implementation notes

  • In the code above, the translation table is given as an optional argument, meaning that it is evaluated only once, and conveniently encapsulated in the function which makes use of it. If you prefer a more standard style, define a global BOLD_TRANS constant, or use a closure or a lightweight class.

Upvotes: 5

g1ga byte
g1ga byte

Reputation: 27

def say(text: str):  
  print ("\033[1;37m" + text)

say("Hello, world!")

my code works okay.

Upvotes: -1

suman shekhar
suman shekhar

Reputation: 21

There is something called escape sequence which is used to represent characters that is not available in your keyboard. It can be used for formatting text (in this case bold letter format), represent special character with specific ASCII code and to represent Unicode characters.

In Python, escape sequences are denoted by a backslash \ followed by one or more characters. For example, the escape sequence \n represents a newline character, and the escape sequence \t represents a tab character.

Here for formatting text in bold use \033[1m before and after the text you want to represent in bold.

example-

print("This line represent example of \033[1mescape sequence\033[0m.")

In the escape sequence \033[1m, the 1 enables bold text, while the m is the command to set the text formatting. The \033[0m escape sequence resets the text formatting to the default settings.

The \033[0m escape sequence is used after the \033[1m escape sequence to turn off bold text and return to the default text formatting. This is necessary because the \033[1m escape sequence only enables bold text, it does not disable it.

Upvotes: 2

Koushik Romel
Koushik Romel

Reputation: 31

The bold text goes like this in Python:

print("This is how the {}bold{} text looks like in Python".format('\033[1m', '\033[0m'))

This is how the bold text looks like in Python.

Upvotes: 3

Gerrishon Sirere
Gerrishon Sirere

Reputation: 21

Printing in bold made easy.

Install quo using pip:

from quo import echo
echo(f"Hello, World!", bold=True)

Upvotes: 1

monkey
monkey

Reputation: 543

Simple boldness - two-line code

In Pythonย 3, you could use Colorama - simple_colors: (On the Simple Colours page*, go to the heading 'Usage'.) Before you do what is below. Make sure you pip install simple_colours.

from simple_colors import *

print(green('hello', 'bold'))

Enter image description here

Upvotes: 4

John Szakmeister
John Szakmeister

Reputation: 46992

Check out Colorama. It doesn't necessarily help with bolding... but you can do colorized output on both Windows and Linux, and control the brightness:

from colorama import *

init(autoreset=True)
print Fore.RED + 'some red text'
print Style.BRIGHT + Fore.RED + 'some bright red text'

Upvotes: 16

Bacara
Bacara

Reputation: 7223

class color:
   PURPLE = '\033[95m'
   CYAN = '\033[96m'
   DARKCYAN = '\033[36m'
   BLUE = '\033[94m'
   GREEN = '\033[92m'
   YELLOW = '\033[93m'
   RED = '\033[91m'
   BOLD = '\033[1m'
   UNDERLINE = '\033[4m'
   END = '\033[0m'

print(color.BOLD + 'Hello, World!' + color.END)

Upvotes: 645

Diego Navarro
Diego Navarro

Reputation: 9704

There is a very useful module for formatting text (bold, underline, colors, etc.) in Python. It uses the curses library, but it's very straightforward to use.

An example:

from terminal import render
print render('%(BG_YELLOW)s%(RED)s%(BOLD)sHey this is a test%(NORMAL)s')
print render('%(BG_GREEN)s%(RED)s%(UNDERLINE)sAnother test%(NORMAL)s')

I wrote a simple module named colors.py to make this a little more pythonic:

import colors

with colors.pretty_output(colors.BOLD, colors.FG_RED) as out:
    out.write("This is a bold red text")

with colors.pretty_output(colors.BG_GREEN) as out:
    out.write("This output have a green background but you " +
               colors.BOLD + colors.FG_RED + "can" + colors.END + " mix styles")

Upvotes: 18

Addison
Addison

Reputation: 3949

Use this:

print '\033[1m' + 'Hello'

And to change back to normal:

print '\033[0m'

This page is a good reference for printing in colors and font-weights. Go to the section that says 'Set graphics mode:'

And note this won't work on all operating systems but you don't need any modules.

Upvotes: 115

Bhavik Sakhiya
Bhavik Sakhiya

Reputation: 227

print '\033[1m  Your Name  \033[0m'

\033[1m is the escape code for bold in the terminal. \033[0m is the escape code for end the edited text and back default text format.

If you do not use \033[0m then all upcoming text of the terminal will become bold.

Upvotes: 17

Zuko
Zuko

Reputation: 2914

You can use termcolor for this:

 sudo pip install termcolor

To print a colored bold:

 from termcolor import colored
 print(colored('Hello', 'green', attrs=['bold']))

For more information, see termcolor on PyPi.

simple-colors is another package with similar syntax:

 from simple_colors import *
 print(green('Hello', ['bold'])

The equivalent in colorama may be Style.BRIGHT.

Upvotes: 55

Christian
Christian

Reputation: 519

Install the termcolor module

sudo pip install termcolor

and then try this for colored text

from termcolor import colored
print colored('Hello', 'green')

or this for bold text:

from termcolor import colored
print colored('Hello', attrs=['bold'])

In Python 3 you can alternatively use cprint as a drop-in replacement for the built-in print, with the optional second parameter for colors or the attrs parameter for bold (and other attributes such as underline) in addition to the normal named print arguments such as file or end.

import sys
from termcolor import cprint
cprint('Hello', 'green', attrs=['bold'], file=sys.stderr)

Full disclosure, this answer is heavily based on Olu Smith's answer and was intended as an edit, which would have reduced the noise on this page considerably but because of some reviewers' misguided concept of what an edit is supposed to be, I am now forced to make this a separate answer.

Upvotes: 10

Ken Kinder
Ken Kinder

Reputation: 13120

In straight-up computer programming, there is no such thing as "printing bold text". Let's back up a bit and understand that your text is a string of bytes and bytes are just bundles of bits. To the computer, here's your "hello" text, in binary.

0110100001100101011011000110110001101111

Each one or zero is a bit. Every eight bits is a byte. Every byte is, in a string like that in Python 2.x, one letter/number/punctuation item (called a character). So for example:

01101000 01100101 01101100 01101100 01101111
h        e        l        l        o

The computer translates those bits into letters, but in a traditional string (called an ASCII string), there is nothing to indicate bold text. In a Unicode string, which works a little differently, the computer can support international language characters, like Chinese ones, but again, there's nothing to say that some text is bold and some text is not. There's also no explicit font, text size, etc.

In the case of printing HTML, you're still outputting a string. But the computer program reading that string (a web browser) is programmed to interpret text like this is <b>bold</b> as "this is bold" when it converts your string of letters into pixels on the screen. If all text were WYSIWYG, the need for HTML itself would be mitigated -- you would just select text in your editor and bold it instead of typing out the HTML.

Other programs use different systems -- a lot of answers explained a completely different system for printing bold text on terminals. I'm glad you found out how to do what you want to do, but at some point, you'll want to understand how strings and memory work.

Upvotes: 32

John Machin
John Machin

Reputation: 82924

Assuming that you really mean "print" on a real printing terminal:

>>> text = 'foo bar\r\noof\trab\r\n'
>>> ''.join(s if i & 1 else (s + '\b' * len(s)) * 2 + s
...         for i, s in enumerate(re.split(r'(\s+)', text)))
'foo\x08\x08\x08foo\x08\x08\x08foo bar\x08\x08\x08bar\x08\x08\x08bar\r\noof\x08\
x08\x08oof\x08\x08\x08oof\trab\x08\x08\x08rab\x08\x08\x08rab\r\n'

Just send that to your stdout.

Upvotes: 3

Maciek
Maciek

Reputation: 3234

Some terminals allow to print colored text. Some colors look like if they are "bold". Try:

print ('\033[1;37mciao!')

The sequence '\033[1;37m' makes some terminals to start printing in "bright white" that may look a bit like bolded white. '\033[0;0m' will turn it off.

Upvotes: 3

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