307
votes

I'm writing a Bash script that prints some text to the screen:

echo "Some Text"

Can I format the text? I would like to make it bold.

5

5 Answers

515
votes

The most compatible way of doing this is using tput to discover the right sequences to send to the terminal:

bold=$(tput bold)
normal=$(tput sgr0)

then you can use the variables $bold and $normal to format things:

echo "this is ${bold}bold${normal} but this isn't"

gives

this is bold but this isn't

129
votes

In order to apply a style on your string, you can use a command like:

echo -e '\033[1mYOUR_STRING\033[0m'

Explanation:

  • echo -e - The -e option means that escaped (backslashed) strings will be interpreted
  • \033 - escaped sequence represents beginning/ending of the style
  • lowercase m - indicates the end of the sequence
  • 1 - Bold attribute (see below for more)
  • [0m - resets all attributes, colors, formatting, etc.

The possible integers are:

  • 0 - Normal Style
  • 1 - Bold
  • 2 - Dim
  • 3 - Italic
  • 4 - Underlined
  • 5 - Blinking
  • 7 - Reverse
  • 8 - Invisible
50
votes

I assume bash is running on a vt100-compatible terminal in which the user did not explicitly turn off the support for formatting.

First, turn on support for special characters in echo, using -e option. Later, use ansi escape sequence ESC[1m, like:

echo -e "\033[1mSome Text"

More on ansi escape sequences for example here: ascii-table.com/ansi-escape-sequences-vt-100.php

17
votes

In theory like so:

# BOLD
$ echo -e "\033[1mThis is a BOLD line\033[0m"
This is a BOLD line

# Using tput
tput bold 
echo "This" #BOLD
tput sgr0 #Reset text attributes to normal without clear.
echo "This" #NORMAL

# UNDERLINE
$ echo -e "\033[4mThis is a underlined line.\033[0m"
This is a underlined line. 

But in practice it may be interpreted as "high intensity" color instead.

(source: http://unstableme.blogspot.com/2008/01/ansi-escape-sequences-for-writing-text.html)

-2
votes

This is an old post but regardless, you can also get boldface and italic characters by leveraging utf-32. There are even greek and math symbols that can be used as well as the roman alphabet.