A small command-line application to view images from the terminal written in Rust. It uses lower half blocks (▄ or \u2584) to fit 2 pixels into a single cell by adjusting foreground and background colours accordingly.
Features (see Usage):
- Animated GIF support
- Accept media through stdin
- Custom dimensions
Installation from source requires a local Rust environment.
git clone https://github.com/atanunq/viu.git
# Build & Install
cd viu/
cargo install --path .
# Use
viu img/giphy.gif
Or without cloning:
cargo install viu
First, you will need the WASI target installed in your Rust system:
rustup target add wasm32-wasi
Once WASI is available, you can build the WebAssembly binary by yourself with:
cargo build --release --target wasm32-wasi
This will create a new file located at target/wasm32-wasi/release/viu.wasm
.
When the wasm file is created you can upload it to wapm or execute it with wasmer:
wapm publish
# OR
wasmer run target/wasm32-wasi/release/viu.wasm --dir=. -- img/giphy.gif
A precompiled binary can be downloaded from the release page.
Viu can be installed in Linux, macOS and Windows using wapm:
wapm install -g viu
There is an AUR package available for Arch Linux.
Ctrl-C was pressed to stop the GIFs.
Examples:
viu img/giphy.gif
viu img/*
viu ~/Pictures -rn
The shell will expand the wildcard above and viu will display all the images in the folder one after the other. For a more informative output when dealing with folders the flag -n could be used.
When viu
receives only one file and it is GIF, it will be displayed over and over until Ctrl-C is pressed. However, when couple of files are up for display (second example) the GIF will be displayed only once.
If no flags are supplied to viu it will try to get the size of the terminal where it was invoked. If it succeeds it will fit the image and preserve the aspect ratio. The aspect ratio will be changed only if both options -w and -h are used together.
USAGE:
viu [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] [FILE]...
FLAGS:
-m, --mirror Display a mirror of the original image
-n, --name Output the name of the file before displaying
-1, --once Only loop once through the animation
-r, --recursive Recurse down directories if passed one
-t, --transparent Display transparent image with transparent background
-v, --verbose Output what is going on
OPTIONS:
-h, --height <height> Resize the image to a provided height
-w, --width <width> Resize the image to a provided width
ARGS:
<FILE>... The image to be displayed