WriteStream - Node documentation
class WriteStream
extends net.Socket

Usage in Deno

import { WriteStream } from "node:tty";

Represents the writable side of a TTY. In normal circumstances,process.stdout and process.stderr will be the onlytty.WriteStream instances created for a Node.js process and there should be no reason to create additional instances.

Constructors

new
WriteStream(fd: number)

Properties

columns: number

A number specifying the number of columns the TTY currently has. This property is updated whenever the 'resize' event is emitted.

isTTY: boolean

A boolean that is always true.

rows: number

A number specifying the number of rows the TTY currently has. This property is updated whenever the 'resize' event is emitted.

Methods

addListener(
event: string,
listener: (...args: any[]) => void,
): this
addListener(
event: "resize",
listener: () => void,
): this
clearLine(
dir: Direction,
callback?: () => void,
): boolean

writeStream.clearLine() clears the current line of this WriteStream in a direction identified by dir.

clearScreenDown(callback?: () => void): boolean

writeStream.clearScreenDown() clears this WriteStream from the current cursor down.

cursorTo(
x: number,
y?: number,
callback?: () => void,
): boolean

writeStream.cursorTo() moves this WriteStream's cursor to the specified position.

cursorTo(
x: number,
callback: () => void,
): boolean
emit(
event: string | symbol,
...args: any[],
): boolean
emit(event: "resize"): boolean
getColorDepth(env?: object): number

Returns:

  • 1 for 2,
  • 4 for 16,
  • 8 for 256,
  • 24 for 16,777,216 colors supported.

Use this to determine what colors the terminal supports. Due to the nature of colors in terminals it is possible to either have false positives or false negatives. It depends on process information and the environment variables that may lie about what terminal is used. It is possible to pass in an env object to simulate the usage of a specific terminal. This can be useful to check how specific environment settings behave.

To enforce a specific color support, use one of the below environment settings.

  • 2 colors: FORCE_COLOR = 0 (Disables colors)
  • 16 colors: FORCE_COLOR = 1
  • 256 colors: FORCE_COLOR = 2
  • 16,777,216 colors: FORCE_COLOR = 3

Disabling color support is also possible by using the NO_COLOR andNODE_DISABLE_COLORS environment variables.

getWindowSize(): [number, number]

writeStream.getWindowSize() returns the size of the TTY corresponding to this WriteStream. The array is of the type[numColumns, numRows] where numColumns and numRows represent the number of columns and rows in the corresponding TTY.

hasColors(count?: number): boolean

Returns true if the writeStream supports at least as many colors as provided in count. Minimum support is 2 (black and white).

This has the same false positives and negatives as described in writeStream.getColorDepth().

process.stdout.hasColors();
// Returns true or false depending on if `stdout` supports at least 16 colors.
process.stdout.hasColors(256);
// Returns true or false depending on if `stdout` supports at least 256 colors.
process.stdout.hasColors({ TMUX: '1' });
// Returns true.
process.stdout.hasColors(2 ** 24, { TMUX: '1' });
// Returns false (the environment setting pretends to support 2 ** 8 colors).
hasColors(env?: object): boolean
hasColors(
count: number,
env?: object,
): boolean
moveCursor(
dx: number,
dy: number,
callback?: () => void,
): boolean

writeStream.moveCursor() moves this WriteStream's cursor relative to its current position.

on(
event: string,
listener: (...args: any[]) => void,
): this
on(
event: "resize",
listener: () => void,
): this
once(
event: string,
listener: (...args: any[]) => void,
): this
once(
event: "resize",
listener: () => void,
): this
prependListener(
event: string,
listener: (...args: any[]) => void,
): this
prependListener(
event: "resize",
listener: () => void,
): this
prependOnceListener(
event: string,
listener: (...args: any[]) => void,
): this
prependOnceListener(
event: "resize",
listener: () => void,
): this