# ASCIITXT ``` Just a simple utilities for creating... _____ _____ __ __ _____ |_ _| | ____| \ \/ / |_ _| | | | _| \ / | | | | | |___ / \ | | |_| |_____| /_/\_\ |_| _ ___ _ __ _____ | | |_ _| | |/ / | ____| | | | | | ' / | _| | |___ | | | . \ | |___ |_____| |___| |_|\_\ |_____| _____ _ _ ___ ____ |_ _| | | | | |_ _| / ___| | | | |_| | | | \___ \ | | | _ | | | ___) | |_| |_| |_| |___| |____/ The usage is pretty straight forward, on your Go file: import "github.com/aldy505/asciitxt" func main() { output := asciitxt.New("Hello world", asciitxt.Standard) // or output = asciitxt.WithConfig("Hello world", &asciitxt.Config{ Style: asciitxt.Standard, }) } What's the asciitxt.Standard, you asked. Well, I thought it would be nice if we could have more than one style. But, for now that's a long term plan. My current goal is to support most unicode letters and signs. Licensed under MIT License. See the LICENSE file. ```