During talks or screencasts I don't want to be typing code, it is too error prone and too likely to mess up my speaking flow. Purdy is both a set of programs and a library to display colourized code in a series of animations.
The purdy command displays your program or data to screen with
colourization. It supports a number of syntax highlighters including Python,
Python REPL, Bash console and more. Source code can be presented to the
screen as if typing. For console files, the typing pauses at a prompt,
waiting for interaction. Prompts are:
>>>or...for Python REPL$for Bash console
If the program is paused at a prompt, pressing the right arrow will continue. Typing animation can be skipped over by pressing the letter "s" instead. Animation can be undone by pressing the left arrow. More info on keys can be found in the help dialog, viewed by pressing "h".
Example Usage:
$ purdy code-snippet.pyThe result looks like this:
Once the code has been displayed, further key presses are ignored. At any time you can press "q" to quit.
The following programs come with the purdy library:
purdy-- Animated display that looks like a program is being typed to the screen.subpurdy-- Full set of commands to control Purdy. Sub-commands dictate behaviour, doing a variety of code presentation. Includes ANSI, RTF, HTML output as well as the typewriter animations.
More information can be found in the Command Line Program Documentation.
The following keys help you to control the TUI purdy programs:
h-- Help screen<RIGHT>-- next animation step<LEFT>-- previous animation steps-- go to the next step, skipping any animation
For custom made code using the purdy library, the following controls will also work:
<TAB>-- focus next window area in a multi Screen display<SHIFT><TAB>-- focus previous window area in a multi Screen display
Additionally the s, and <LEFT> commands all support skipping multiple
steps by specifying a number first. For example the sequence 12s would
skip past the next 12 steps.
The purdy script is fairly simple, but you can create more complex
animations by writing programs using the purdy library. Custom programs can
have split screens, highlight lines, do slide transitions, and more. More
information can be found in the Library Documentation.
$ pip install purdyPurdy has been tested with Python 3.13. Terminal control is done with the Textual library. Parsing and tokenization is done through Pygments. Both libraries are excellent and I'm grateful they're publicly available.
Purdy was re-written from the ground up for version 2, moving to Textual and
doing an API redesign based on pain points over the years. Version 2 is not
compatible with version 1 which was based on Urwid. For
the deprecated version see the purdy 1 branch or pip install
purdy==1.14.1.
