<3 ./ponysay.py --help
usage: ponysay.py [-h] [-p PONY] [-q] [-c] [-C] [-w WIDTH] [-b BALLOON]
[text [text ...]]
Cowsay with ponies
positional arguments:
text The text to be placed in the speech bubble
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-p PONY, --pony PONY The name of the pony to be used. Use "-p list" to list
all ponies, "-p random" (default) to use a random
pony.
-q, --quote Use a random quote of the pony being displayed as text
-c, --center Use a random quote of the pony being displayed as text
-C, --center-text Center the text in the bubble
-w WIDTH, --width WIDTH
Terminal width. Use 0 for unlimited width. Default:
autodetect
-b BALLOON, --balloon BALLOON
Balloon style to use. Use "-b list" to list available
styles.
This is my fork of https://github.com/erkin/ponysay I really liked the concept, but I sort-of WTF-ed at the 2458-line python script powering it. So I rewrote the thing from scratch in actual python (not that bad since most of the work is done by util-say). Also, I missed a "--center"-option, so I added one. This rewrite is 117 lines long, and that includes the 7 original bubble styles which now are embedded in the python script. This means 95.2% less bloat, which I consider a success. Also, the rewrite is about 50-85% faster.
Fork me on github: https://github.com/jaseg/ponysay
Q: The output looks like a mess in TTY/PuTTY/other
A: Yeah, sorry. If you find a fix, send me a pull request.
Q: Which programs do you use to generate the pony files?
A: The pony files are actually mostly a bunch of selected browser ponies, converted using util-say.
Convert the old quote format with
for line in $(cat ponyquotes/ponies|grep +); do n=${line%%+*}; for a in $(sed s/+/\\n/g<<<${line#*+}); do ln -s quotes/${n}.quotes quotes/${a}.quotes; done; done
Afterwards, clean up the broken symlinks with find -L quotes -type l -delete