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                       Term::ANSIColor version 3.00
              (A simple ANSI text attribute control module)

  Copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009
  Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> and Zenin.  This program is free
  software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms
  as Perl itself.

  I welcome bug reports and patches for this package at rra@stanford.edu.
  However, please be aware that I tend to be extremely busy and to get a
  lot of mail.  I'll save your mail and get to it as soon as I can, but
  depending on how busy I am it may take me a couple of months.

BLURB

  Term::ANSIColor provides constants and simple functions for sending ANSI
  text attributes, most notably colors.  It can be used to set the current
  text attributes or to apply a set of attributes to a string and reset
  the current text attributes at the end of that string.

DESCRIPTION

  This module grew out of a thread on comp.lang.perl.misc where several of
  us were throwing around different ways to print colored text from Perl
  scripts and Zenin posted his old library to do that.  I (Russ) disagreed
  with the implementation and offered my own (the color() and colored()
  functions implemented in this package), Zenin convinced me that the
  constants had their place as well, and we started figuring out the best
  ways of implementing both.

  While ANSI color escape codes are fairly simple, it can be hard to
  remember the codes for all of the attributes and the code resulting from
  hard-coding them into your script is definitely difficult to read.  This
  module is designed to fix those problems, as well as provide a
  convenient interface to do a few things for you automatically (like
  resetting attributes after the text you print out so that you don't
  accidentally leave attributes set).

  Despite its name, this module can also handle non-color ANSI text
  attributes (bold, underline, reverse video, and blink).  It uses either
  of two interfaces, one of which uses "constants" for each different
  attribute and the other of which uses two subs which take strings of
  attributes as arguments.

  See the POD documentation for complete details, features, and usage.

  This module is distributed as part of the Perl core distribution as of
  Perl 5.6.0.  You only need to install this module if you want a newer
  version than came with Perl or if you have an old version of Perl.

REQUIREMENTS

  Term::ANSIColor is written in pure Perl and has no module dependencies
  that aren't found in Perl core.  It should work with any version of Perl
  after 5.001, although it hasn't been tested with old versions in some
  time.

  The test suite requires the Test::More module.  To check the POD
  documentation, Test::Pod is also required.  To check spelling,
  Pod::Spell and either aspell or ispell with the american dictionary are
  also required.  The user's path is searched for aspell or ispell and
  aspell is preferred.  Spelling tests are disabled by default since
  spelling dictionaries differ too much between systems.  To enable those
  tests, set RRA_MAINTAINER_TESTS to a true value.

INSTALLATION

  WARNING: Installation of this package will replace the Term::ANSIColor
  that came with Perl for Perl 5.6.0 or later.  Term::ANSIColor that came
  with Perl.  You may want to save a backup copy of the standard version
  first.

  Follow the standard installation procedure for Perl modules, which is to
  type the following commands:

      perl Makefile.PL
      make
      make test
      make install

  You'll probably need to do the last as root.  If instead you wish to
  install the module by hand, simply copy it into a directory named Term
  in your Perl library directory.

HOMEPAGE AND SOURCE REPOSITORY

  The Term::ANSIColor web page at:

      http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/ansicolor/

  will always have the current version of this package, the current
  documentation, and pointers to any additional resources.

  Term::ANSIColor is maintained using Git.  You can access the current
  source by cloning the repository at:

      git://git.eyrie.org/perl/ansicolor.git

  or view the repository on the web at:

      http://git.eyrie.org/?p=perl/ansicolor.git

THANKS

  To Jon Lennox for looking at early versions of this module, providing
  feedback, and offering suggestions for improvement.

  To Jesse Taylor for writing the first significant script to use this
  module (colorized calsplit), thus offering innumerable opportunities to
  test and debug.

  To Jean Delvare for providing documentation of what the various
  attributes do on various different terminal emulators, and for noting
  that attribute 2 is dark.

  To Edward Avis for the implementation of uncolor.

  To Rani Pinchuk for the idea of ANSI_COLORS_DISABLED and an initial
  implementation.

  To ATricket for the information about what PuTTY, Windows telnet, and
  OpenSSH under Cygwin support.

  To Richard Maus for pointing out DARK was missing from the exported
  constants list and CYAN and WHITE were missing from the documentation.

  To Autrijus Tang for noticing a problem with string comparisons in the
  test suite.

  To Daniel Lindsley for the information about what Mac OS X Terminal
  supports.

  To Joe Smith for the test files that exercise a wide variety of VT100
  escape sequences including the ECMA-48 color control codes.

  To James Bowlin for catching a bug in colored when $EACHLINE is set that
  caused it to not color lines consisting solely of 0.

  To Helge Kreutzmann for pointing out the need for warnings in the
  documentation about background colors that span newlines.

  To Baron Schwartz for pointing out that cyan and white were missing from
  the documentation.

  To Michael R. Wolf for pointing out that Wikipedia and the ECMA standard
  use faint instead of dark as the name of attribute 2.

  To openmethods.com voice solutions for contributing PUSHCOLOR, POPCOLOR,
  and LOCALCOLOR support.

  To Tim Bellinghausen for the AUTOLOAD taint fix for Perl 5.10.

  To Paul Miller for the idea and initial implementation of colorstrip.

  To Jakob Ilves for sixteen-color support and the initial documentation
  of bright color issues.

  To Larry Wall, as always, for Perl.