ponysay
— cowsay reimplemention for ponies.
Today your terminal, tomorrow the world!
Download or clone the project.
In the terminal, cd
into the ponysay directory and ./setup.py --freedom=partial install
or python3 setup.py --freedom=partial install
.
You may need to be super user to run ./setup.py --freedom=partial install
without --private
, on most systems this
can be achieved by running sudo ./setup.py --freedom=partial install
.
If you only want completely free ponies install use --freedom=strict
instead of --freedom=partial
.
For more information we have provided you with an extensive manual in PDF.
In order to use ponysay, run:
ponysay "I am just the cutest pony!"
Or if you have a specific pony in your mind:
ponysay -f pinkie "Partay!~"
Run info ponysay
, man 6 ponysay
or ponysay -h
for more information.
A Spanish manual is available: man -L es 6 ponysay
.
The package is in the official repositories as community/ponysay
, there is also a git version named ponysay-git
in AUR.
A git version of the package is available as ponysay-git
in CCR, alongside a stable package as ponysay
.
There is a package for Gentoo, to make installation and keeping it up to date easy. You can find it in this overlay. The package is named games-misc/ponysay
.
The DEB file can be found in those PPA:s here and here.
This requires that you have the fortune
utility installed. You can install it from your repositories (may be named fortune-mod
)
or just fetch the source code from here.
You can try this script or ponypipe to ponify fortunes.
Edit your ~/.bashrc
and add this to the end of the file
fortune | ponysay
Now every time you open a terminal a pony should give your fortune
Running ponysay --q
will give you a random pony saying one it its quote from MLP:FiM, or you can specify the pony: ponysay -q pinkie
.
Just as with -f
, -q
can be used multiple time to to sepecify a set of ponies from which one will be selected randomly.
When running ponysay -l
or ponysay -L
the ponies which have quotes will be printed bold or bright (depending on terminal).
If you have a custom colour palette edit your ~/.bashrc
and add
if [ "$TERM" = "linux" ]; then
function ponysay
{
exec ponysay "$@"
#RESET PALETTE HERE
}
fi
Read the PDF or info manual for more information.
coreutils
: stty
in coreutils used to determine size of the terminal
python>=3
: written in python 3
gzip
: used for compressing manuals (suppressable with ./configure --without-info-compression --without-man-compression
)
texinfo
: used for building info manual (suppressable with ./configure --without-info
)
python>=3
: the installation process is written in python 3
Run ./dependency-test.sh
if things are not working for you.
Q: The output looks like a mess in (TTY/PuTTY/other)!
A: Unfortunately we cannot make it perfect, see issue 1. But we have done a lot, read more about how to get the best the current state of the art has to offer in the manual.
Q: You are missing (my-favourite-pony)!
A: Ask and we'll add!
Q: The outpus look weird on my (xfce4-terminal/mate-terminal/xterm) whit this font
A: We use block for print the ponies, if the block are desalignated or you not use a real monospaced font with aligned blocks try another different and mopnospace font like 'Liberation Mono'.
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, Other are taken from desktop ponies, and finally another are created specificaly for ponysay.
The PDF manual should answer most of your questions.