Metadata-Version: 2.2
Name: charsay
Version: 0.1.33
Summary: A simple Python package that generates ASCII art of characters saying a given string.
Home-page: https://github.com/kish-0/charsay
Author: Kishan S
Author-email: senthilkumarkishan@gmail.com
License: MIT
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
License-File: LICENSE.md
Dynamic: author
Dynamic: author-email
Dynamic: classifier
Dynamic: description
Dynamic: description-content-type
Dynamic: home-page
Dynamic: license
Dynamic: summary

# Charsay

**Character Say** - A simple Python package that generates ASCII art of characters saying a given string. Currently, it supports Simpsons characters.

## 🔥 Features

- **Simpsons Characters**: Supports Bart, Homer, Marge, Lisa, and Maggie.
- **Customizable Text**: Add your own text for the characters to say.
- **ASCII Art**: Each character is represented in ASCII art form, inspired by existing Simpsons designs.
- **I'm Feeling Lucky**: Initialize `character = Charactersay()` and call the `character.imfeelinglucky()` to get fortune cookie messages.

## 📦 Installation  

To install **`charsay`**, it's recommended to use a **virtual environment** to keep dependencies isolated.  

### 1️⃣ Create and Activate a Virtual Environment  

#### 🔹 Windows (PowerShell)  
```powershell.
python -m venv venv
venv\Scripts\activate
```
#### 🔹 macOS/Linux (Terminal)
```terminal.
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
```
### 2️⃣ Install charsay from PyPI
```bash.
pip install charsay
```
### 3️⃣ Verify Installation
```.bash
pip list
```


## Usage

Here's a basic example of how to use the package:
```python.
from charsay import Charactersay   #import Charactersay() class
```
'horizontal_length' can be any int or float (raises ValueError if otherwise)
'horizontal_length' is an optional parameter (default=60) with a minimum possible value 15 (only for strings > 60char long..for smaller strings -> generated automatically)
```python.
from charsay import Charactersay   #import Charactersay() class
character = Charactersay(horizontal_length=x) # initializing object 
```
'object.string' is the string you want characters to say
```python.
character.string = "Hello, world!"
```
#### Example usage:

```python.
from charsay import Charactersay
character = Charactersay(horizontal_length=50)
character.string = 'English? Who needs that? I’m never going to England.'

character.homer()
```

## 🚀 Available Functions
These methods take no arguments. They only need to be called, and will print the 'object.string' assigned earlier ('Hello, world!' if no string was assigned)
```python.
from charsay import Charactersay
character = Charactersay()

character.homer() 
character.marge()
character.bart()
character.lisa()
character.maggie()
character.imfeelinglucky() 
    #-->Generates a random character saying a random fortune-quote (ignores 'obj'.string)
```

## 🫂 Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Feel free to add more characters or improve existing ones.

## 🔑 License

This project is licensed under the [MIT License](LICENSE).

## 🤝 Acknowledgments

- The Simpsons characters are copyrighted by Disney. This project uses ASCII art designs inspired by these characters for non-commercial purposes.
- ASCII art designs are not original and are based on existing Simpsons designs.

## 👨‍⚖️ Legal Note

Please be aware that using Simpsons characters without permission may infringe on Disney's copyright. This project is intended for personal, non-commercial use. If you plan to use this project commercially, you should seek permission from Disney or ensure your use falls under fair use provisions.
