bat - a cat clone with wings
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A cat(1) clone with syntax highlighting and Git integration.

## Features ### Syntax highlighting `bat` supports syntax highlighting for a large number of programming and markup languages: ![Syntax highlighting example](https://imgur.com/rGsdnDe.png) ### Git integration `bat` communicates with `git` to show modifications with respect to the index (see left side bar): ![Git integration example](https://i.imgur.com/2lSW4RE.png) ### Automatic paging `bat` can pipe its own output to `less` if the output is too large for one screen. ### File concatenation Oh.. you can also use it to concatenate files :wink:. Whenever `bat` detects a non-interactive terminal, it will fall back to printing the plain file contents. ## Usage Display a single file on the terminal ``` bash > bat README.md ``` Display multiple files at once ``` bash > bat src/*.rs ``` Explicitly specify the language ``` bash > yaml2json .travis.yml | json_pp | bat -l json ``` ``` bash > curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sharkdp/bat/master/src/main.rs | bat -l rs ``` ## Installation ### From binaries Check out the [Release page](https://github.com/sharkdp/bat/releases) for binary builds and Debian packages. #### On Arch Linux You can install [the AUR package](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/bat/) via yaourt, or manually: ```bash git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/bat.git cd bat makepkg -si ``` #### On FreeBSD You can install a precompiled [`bat` package](https://www.freshports.org/textproc/bat) with pkg: ```sh pkg install bat ``` or build it on your own from the FreeBSD ports: ```sh cd /usr/ports/textproc/bat make install ``` #### On macOS You can install `bat` with [Homebrew](http://braumeister.org/formula/bat): ``` bash brew install bat ``` ### From source If you want to build to compile `bat` from source, you need Rust 1.24 or higher. You can then use `cargo` to build everything: ``` bash cargo install bat ``` On macOS, you might have to install `cmake` (`brew install cmake`) in order for some dependencies to be built. ## Customization `bat` uses the excellent [`syntect`](https://github.com/trishume/syntect/) library for syntax highlighting. `syntect` can read any [Sublime Text `.sublime-syntax` file](https://www.sublimetext.com/docs/3/syntax.html) and theme. To build your own language-set and theme, follow these steps: Create a folder with a syntax highlighting theme: ``` bash BAT_CONFIG_DIR="$(bat cache --config-dir)" mkdir -p "$BAT_CONFIG_DIR/themes" cd "$BAT_CONFIG_DIR/themes" # Download a theme, for example: git clone https://github.com/jonschlinkert/sublime-monokai-extended # Create a 'Default.tmTheme' link ln -s "sublime-monokai-extended/Monokai Extended.tmTheme" Default.tmTheme ``` Create a folder with language definition files: ``` bash mkdir -p "$BAT_CONFIG_DIR/syntaxes" cd "$BAT_CONFIG_DIR/syntaxes" # Download some language definition files, for example: git clone https://github.com/sublimehq/Packages/ rm -rf Packages/Markdown git clone https://github.com/jonschlinkert/sublime-markdown-extended ``` Finally, use the following command to parse all these files into a binary cache: ``` bash bat cache --init ``` If you ever want to go back to the default settings, call: ``` bash bat cache --clear ``` ## Project goals and alternatives `bat` tries to achieve the following goals: - Provide beautiful, advanced syntax highlighting - Integrate with Git to show file modifications - Be a drop-in replacement for (POSIX) `cat` - Offer a user-friendly command-line interface There are a lot of alternatives, if you are looking for similar programs. See [this document](doc/alternatives.md) for a comparison.