rang Colors for your Terminal. Windows Demo Example usage # include " rang.hpp " using namespace std ; using namespace rang ; int main () { cout << " Plain old text " << style:: bold << " Rang styled text!! " << style::reset << endl; } Dependencies rang only depends on C++ standard library , unistd.h system header on unix and windows.h & io.h system headers on windows based systems. In other words, you don't need any 3rd party dependencies. Installation rang is a single header-only library. Put rang.hpp in the include folder directly into the project source tree or somewhere reachable from your project. Or, if you use the conan package manager , follow these steps: Add a reference to rang to the requires section of your project's conanfile.txt file: [requires] rang/3.1.0@rang/stable Run conan's install command: conan install How to use Rang uses iostream objects - cout / clog / cerr to apply attributes to output text. Since rang aims to support both windows and unix like systems, it takes care of the os specific details and tries to provide a uniform interface. Due to incompatiblities b/w different OS versions, not all kinds of attributes are supported on every system so rang will try to skip the ones which might produce garbage(instead of pushing random ANSI escape codes on your streams). Detection of tty is also handled internally so you don't need to check if application user might redirect output to a file. Need support for non-ansi terminals? Check out Termdb which supports virtually all terminals and their capablities. Apart from setting text attributes, you can also ask rang to override its default behaviour through these methods - void rang::setControlMode (rang::control); where rang::control takes control::Auto - Automatically detects whether terminal supports color or not( Default ) control::Off - Turn off colors completely control::Force - Force colors even if terminal doesn't supports them or output is redirected to non-terminal void rang::setWinTermMode (rang::winTerm); where rang::winTerm takes winTerm::Auto - Checks for newer windows and picks Ansi otherwise falls back to Native( Default ) winTerm::Native - This method is supported in all versions of windows but supports less attributes winTerm::Ansi - This method is supported in newer versions of windows and supports rich variety of attributes Supported attributes with their compatiblity are listed below - Text Styles : Code Linux/Win/Others Old Win rang::style::bold yes yes rang::style::dim yes no rang::style::italic yes no rang::style::underline yes no rang::style::blink no no rang::style::rblink no no rang::style::reversed yes yes rang::style::conceal maybe yes rang::style::crossed yes no Text Color : Code Linux/Win/Others Old Win rang::fg::black yes yes rang::fg::red yes yes rang::fg::green yes yes rang::fg::yellow yes yes rang::fg::blue yes yes rang::fg::magenta yes yes rang::fg::cyan yes yes rang::fg::gray yes yes Background Color : Code Linux/Win/Others Old Win rang::bg::black yes yes rang::bg::red yes yes rang::bg::green yes yes rang::bg::yellow yes yes rang::bg::blue yes yes rang::bg::magenta yes yes rang::bg::cyan yes yes rang::bg::gray yes yes Bright Foreground Color : Code Linux/Win/Others Old Win rang::fgB::black yes yes rang::fgB::red yes yes rang::fgB::green yes yes rang::fgB::yellow yes yes rang::fgB::blue yes yes rang::fgB::magenta yes yes rang::fgB::cyan yes yes rang::fgB::gray yes yes Bright Background Color : Code Linux/Win/Others Old Win rang::bgB::black yes yes rang::bgB::red yes yes rang::bgB::green yes yes rang::bgB::yellow yes yes rang::bgB::blue yes yes rang::bgB::magenta yes yes rang::bgB::cyan yes yes rang::bgB::gray yes yes Reset Styles/Colors : Code Linux/Win/Others Old Win rang::style::reset yes yes rang::fg::reset yes yes rang::bg::reset yes yes My terminal is not detected/gets garbage output! Check your env variable TERM 's value. Then open an issue here and make sure to mention TERM 's value along with your terminal name. Redirecting cout / cerr / clog rdbuf? Rang doesn't interfere if you try to redirect cout / cerr / clog to somewhere else and leaves the decision to the library user. Make sure you've read this conversation and check out the example code here .