EggEgg.CSharp-Logger
4.0.1
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package EggEgg.CSharp-Logger --version 4.0.1
NuGet\Install-Package EggEgg.CSharp-Logger -Version 4.0.1
<PackageReference Include="EggEgg.CSharp-Logger" Version="4.0.1" />
paket add EggEgg.CSharp-Logger --version 4.0.1
#r "nuget: EggEgg.CSharp-Logger, 4.0.1"
// Install EggEgg.CSharp-Logger as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=EggEgg.CSharp-Logger&version=4.0.1 // Install EggEgg.CSharp-Logger as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=EggEgg.CSharp-Logger&version=4.0.1
中文 | EN
csharp-logger
A convenient C# Logger implementation, with reliable console interaction encapsulation support available.
You can download it on nuget.org by searching EggEgg.CSharp-Logger.
Update
v4.0.1
- Fixed the issue whereby the file created in the constructor of
BaseLogger
using the overloadBaseLogger(LoggerConfig, LogFileConfig)
could not be utilized in the overloadBaseLogger(LoggerConfig, string)
. - Fixed the issue whereby after using the overload
BaseLogger(LoggerConfig, LogFileConfig)
in the constructor ofBaseLogger
, multiple files with the same name or only case-insensitive differences were allowed to be created without checks.
These fixes also apply to other similar overloads.
v4.0.0
This version almost re-implements the entire logger, extracting the main functions of the static class Log
and encapsulating them into BaseLogger
. The original functions are not affected and some bugs have been fixed, but there may be some breaking changes.
Please note that although BaseLogger
is a complete log implementation, you must first call Log.Initialize
to use it. In addition, although different initialization LoggerConfig
can be provided for each BaseLogger
, its key fields must be consistent with the version provided when Log.Initialize
, to keep the behavior of Logger consistent throughout the program.
The affected fields at this stage are: Use_Console_Wrapper
, Use_Working_Directory
, Max_Output_Char_Count
, Enable_Detailed_Time
.
Main changes:
Fixed the problem that due to the defect of the timing algorithm, the log processing background task will not wait for the specified time after processing the log.
Fixed the problem that in most cases, the waiting time for cleaning (1.5s) will reach the maximum value, and it is still possible that the console cleaning cannot be completed.
Fixed the problem that when not reading input by
ConsoleWrapper
, eventConsoleWrapper.ShutDownRequest
cannot be triggered by pressing Ctrl+C, until someone starting reading input again.Fixed the problem that in certain conditions,
ConsoleWrapper
accepts invalid characters.Fixed the problem that when providing some log methods and members including
Log.PushLog
with invalidLogLevel
, the logs will enter the handle queue and possibly make the handle thread crash.A new KMP-based algorithm is used to analyze color tag information, which speeds up processing. See Benchmark data for details.
Added
LogTextWriter
that implements the abstract classTextWriter
. But note that it uses a buffer to maintain characters that have not been wrapped; that is, all content before the newline character is not displayed inLogger
.
If some external code usesConsole
's methods and you useConsoleWrapper
(such asCommandLineParser
), you must provide an instance ofLogTextWriter
for it.To make
sender
param not required for each time of logging,LoggerChannel
is added. For code that implements a certain logic, it usually passes the samesender
parameter when calling theLog
method, in which condition you can createLoggerChannel
with thissender
to reduce the amount of code and increase maintainability.Some static methods pointing to the corresponding methods of
BaseLogger
were created in theLog
static class.Now you can set whether to enable time details by setting
LoggerConfig.Enable_Detailed_Time
. By default, the time recorded by Logger is only accurate to the second and does not include the date, corresponding to the formatted stringHH:mm:ss
.
After enabling time details, the details of the log submission time up to one-seventh of a second will be displayed. The corresponding formatted string isyyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss fff ffff
. The two partsfff
andffff
represent the millisecond level and the ten-thousandth of a millisecond (100 nanoseconds, 0.1 microseconds) level, such as2023-08-22 15:43:36 456 4362
. This configuration requires global unity and is effective for both console and log file output.When creating a new log file, you can use
LogFileConfig.IsPipeSeparatedFormat
to indicate whether the created log file is a pipe-separated value file (PSV).
Outputting the log as a table is helpful for analysis when the data volume is extremely large, especially if a large amount of modular code in the program does not change the sender parameter when calling the Log method. This configuration does not affect the content output to the console, and for some performance considerations, currently only|
is accepted as the separator. The output format is:[time]|[level]|[sender]|[content] 23:14:17|Warn|TestSender|Push a warning log!
Now you can provide a
basedlogger
parameter forLogTraceListener
andLogTextWriter
to change their output targetBaseLogger
. The default value is stillLog.GlobalBasedLogger
shared by the global static classLog
.Some codes of tonerdo/readline are used to implement the new version of
ConsoleWrapper
. But please note that this version of the nuget package does not include references to the nuget package ReadLine, nor does it include theReadLine
class. All operations are still encapsulated asConsoleWrapper
.The experience of modifying text when the text volume is large in
ConsoleWrapper
has been greatly improved.Now setting
ConsoleWrapper.AutoCompleteHandler
can auto-complete user input.Optimized the method indication in the
Log
,BaseLogger
andLoggerChannel
classes.Now you can indicate that the content of the current line should not be included in the command input history by using
ConsoleWrapper.ReadLine(false)
. This is useful when prompting the user to input information that is specific to a certain context (e.g., a confirmation prompt likeType 'y' to confirm, 'n' to refuse
).
Breaking changes
The property
Log.CustomConfig
is renamed toLog.GlobalConfig
, and an access attempt toLog.GlobalConfig
before invokingLog.Initialize
will raiseInvalidOperationException
.Now if the user indicates to use the program path (provided
false
forLoggerConfig.Use_Working_Directory
) duringLog.Initialize
and it cannot be accessed, compared with the previous implementation, it will not issue a warning that the program will fallback to the working directory. Similarly, there will be no warning prompts if an error occurs when compressing past log files.IMPORTANT: In the new version, the default color Logger using in Console is changed to
ConsoleColor.Gray
to be consistent to most Console implements. You can also change this setting byLog.GlobalDefaultColor
property now.IMPORTANT: In the new version, when
Log.Initialize
processing past logs, not onlylatest.log
andlatest.debug.log
, but any log files under thelogs
folder that match the patternlatest.*.log
will be renamed to the last time they were written.
They are also affected by automatic log compression, but this is actually consistent with past behavior.Now if invoking
Log.Initialize
orBaseLogger.Initialize
on platforms not supporting the Console withLoggerConfig.Console_Minimum_LogLevel
not set toLogLevel.None
, an exception will be immerdiately thrown.
You can also use this logger on these platforms, but outputing logs to the Console should be disabled. Windows, macOS, Linux are treated as supported platforms currently.Now at the end of the program, the leave time given to Logger is 1000ms, and the leave time given to console output (whether it is normal output or
ConsoleWrapper
) is 500ms (it will only be performed after Logger's cleaning work is completed). In previous versions, these two numbers were 300ms and 1200ms respectively.The color judgment uses a new algorithm, so it may not be "bug compatible" with the previous implementation.
ConsoleWrapper
uses a new algorithm, developers try to put the breaking changes caused by it below, but the fixed bugs may not be listed.ConsoleWrapper
used to support pasting multi-line text into the input with newline characters reserved (although there will be problems when modifying the text); now it does not support this function, and all newline characters pasted will be replaced with two spaces.The list of recognized newline sequences is CR (U+000D), LF (U+000A), CRLF (U+000D U+000A), NEL (U+0085), LS (U+2028), FF (U+000C), and PS (U+2029). This list is given by the Unicode Standard, Sec. 5.8, Recommendation R4 and Table 5-2.
However, due to some terminals overriding the
Ctrl
+V
shortcut, if your program utilizes the "converting newline characters to spaces for a single input" feature, you may need to prompt the user to use theCtrl
+Alt
+V
shortcut to trigger the built-in paste mechanism. When the clipboard text is large, using the built-in paste can significantly improve the performance of the input box.
The following table lists the support for various consoles when the shortcut keys in the table header reachConsoleWrapper
. "Supported" means that newline characters will be correctly converted to two spaces; "Not supported" means that the terminal overrides the shortcut key, causing newline characters in the clipboard to become carriage returns; "Blocked" means that the terminal neither overrides the shortcut key as paste nor passes the key to the program, i.e., the key is completely ignored (mostly due to conflicts with other shortcut keys). The test environment is Windows 11.Terminal Type Ctrl
+V
Ctrl
+Shift
+V
Ctrl
+Alt
+V
Windows
+V
(Paste selected clipboard record)Windows cmd.exe Supported Supported Supported Supported Windows powershell.exe Supported Supported Supported Supported Windows Terminal Not supported Not supported Supported Not supported VSCode Integrated Terminal (powershell, windows) Supported Not supported Blocked Supported VSCode Integrated Terminal (cmd, windows) Not supported Not supported Blocked Not supported VSCode Integrated Terminal (Git Bash MINGW64, windows) Not supported Not supported Blocked Not supported VSCode Integrated Terminal (Javascript Debug Terminal, windows) Supported Not supported Blocked Supported VSCode Integrated Terminal (Bash, Remote) Not supported Not supported Blocked Not supported Visual Studio Developer Powershell Integrated Terminal Supported Supported Blocked Supported Visual Studio Developer Command Prompt Integrated Terminal Supported Not supported Blocked Supported In summary, if your program does rely on this mechanism, please prompt the user to use
Ctrl
+Alt
+V
in Windows Terminal. In other environments,Ctrl
+V
can be used.ConsoleWrapper
now supports history merging similar to bash, that is, executing a command multiple times in a row will not leave multiple records in history.ConsoleWrapper
will no longer include unconfirmed input in the command history. Therefore, pressing the up/down arrow keys will not include unconfirmed input. For example, if you enter1[Enter]2[Enter][Up Arrow][Enter]
without any thread waiting forConsoleWrapper.ReadLine
, the third call toConsoleWrapper.ReadLine
will return an empty string (in previous versions, it would return2
).The new reading method of
ConsoleWrapper
is similar to GNU Readline, but this causes a conflict with the past behavior of Ctrl+C, so the function of Ctrl+C triggering theConsoleWrapper.ShutDownRequest
event is retained. In addition to this, all other functions of the attached GNU readline shortcut keys can be regarded as breaking changes.In order to support the input of Chinese and full-width characters and other wide characters, while avoiding the processing of various corner cases, now
ConsoleWrapper
reduces the number of characters that can fit in a single line by 1 bit, which is reserved as the extra space for full-width characters.Now, if a command input line have characters exceeding the console window, it won't be recorded in the input history. You can set
ConsoleWrapper.HistoryMaximumChars
to change the default behaviour.
Set it to a positive value can apply the limit, 0 can stop the history (since then), and -1 can cancel the limit.This project will not be backward compatible with any version below
.NET 6.0
in the future, including.NET Standard 2.1
.
Features
Basic log implementation
Usage: FirstLog.Initialize(LoggerConfig)
, thenLog.Info(content, sender)
,Log.Erro(...)
、Log.Warn(...)
、Log.Dbug(...)
. You can also first callLog.GetChannel(sender)
to determine asender
parameter, and then calllogchan.LogInfo(content)
.Color output Support
Just add xml tags in text, like:<color=Red>Output as red color</color>
.
The Color value should be a valid value in ConsoleColor, e.g. "Red", "Green". Recognized color tags will be removed in the log file.Parallel user input/log output support
If you want to read the user's input while outputting logs in parallel (e.g. making a CLI program),ConsoleWrapper
is provided.
You can set the value ofConsoleWrapper.InputPrefix
as a waiting-input prefix, just likemysql>
orubuntu ~$
, and useConsoleWrapper.ReadLineAsync
to read inputs from the user. You can also setConsoleWrapper.AutoCompleteHandler
and enable auto-completion of user's input.
It accepts some GNU readline shortcut keys to read data, but comparing with other .NET GNU readline implementions, it fully supports Chinese and full-width characters input. The following table is the support list:Shortcut key Function Ctrl
+A
/HOME
Go to the beginning of the input Ctrl
+B
/←
Move the cursor back one character (usually move left) Ctrl
+C
Different from GNU readline, it means to terminate the program Ctrl
+E
/END
Go to the end of the input Ctrl
+F
/→
Move the cursor forward one character (usually move right) Ctrl
+H
/Backspace
Delete one character before the cursor Tab
Auto complete Shift
+Tab
Previous auto complete Ctrl
+J
/Enter
Confirm input Ctrl
+K
Cut off the characters from the cursor position (including) to the end of the input Ctrl
+L
Clear the input area Ctrl
+M
The effect is equivalent to enter Ctrl
+N
/↓
Next command history Ctrl
+P
/↑
Previous command history Ctrl
+U
Cut off the characters from the cursor position (not including) to the beginning of the input Ctrl
+W
Cut off a word before the cursor, that is, cut off the characters from the cursor position (not including) to the first space behind (usually left) (not including) Ctrl
+T
Abandoned due to the introduction of Chinese, full-width input support Transpose (reverse) the character before the current cursor position with the character after it, and move the cursor forward one positionBackspace
Delete one character before the cursor Ctrl
+D
/Delete
Delete one character at the cursor position In addition, it can read data larger than 4096 bits without any configuration. But please note that when the user's input is very large and the console frequently outputs logs, it may affect performance. It is disabled by default, and you can enable it through
LoggerConfig(use_Console_Wrapper: true)
.Output Quantity Limit
Outputting a large amount of information to the console can severely impact performance. You can set the maximum output limit for each log message usingLoggerConfig.Max_Output_Char_Count
. If a log message exceeds this value, its content will not be displayed in the console, and a special warning will be shown instead. You can find the content in the log file.
You can also disable this feature by setting it to-1
.Auto Compress Logs
If there are logs created 1 day ago, they will be compressed into a zip file likelogs.[Date].zip
.Record logs as a table
When creating each new log file, you can useLogFileConfig.IsPipeSeparatedFormat
to indicate whether the log file should be in Pipe-separated values format (PSV).
Outputting logs as a table helps with analysis when dealing with large amounts of data, especially if the Log method is called by modularized code that does not change the sender parameter. This configuration does not affect the content output to the console, and currently only accepts|
as the separator for performance reasons. The output format is:[time]|[level]|[sender]|[content] 23:14:17|Warn|TestSender|Push a warning log!
Best Practices
Call
Log.Initialize(LoggerConfig)
at the entry point of the program (or anywhere else, the earlier the better) to initialize globally, then start using the log related methods.Be careful to configure the various functions of
LoggerConfig
. If you just want to use it as a regular logger, here is a recommended configuration:Log.Initialize(new LoggerConfig( max_Output_Char_Count: -1, use_Console_Wrapper: false, use_Working_Directory: true, #if DEBUG global_Minimum_LogLevel: LogLevel.Verbose, console_Minimum_LogLevel: LogLevel.Information, #else global_Minimum_LogLevel: LogLevel.Information, console_Minimum_LogLevel: LogLevel.Information, #endif debug_LogWriter_AutoFlush: true, is_PipeSeparated_Format: false, enable_Detailed_Time: false ));
If you want to use the
ConsoleWrapper
function, you need to set theuse_Console_Wrapper
in the aboveLoggerConfig
to true, and then start using its function.When creating a new log file, you can use
LogFileConfig.IsPipeSeparatedFormat
to indicate whether the created log file is a pipe-separated value file (PSV).
Outputting the log as a table is helpful for filtering and analysis when the data volume is extremely large, especially if a large amount of modular code in the program does not change the sender parameter when calling the Log method. You can useBaseLogger(LoggerConfig, LogFileConfig)
to create aBaseLogger
and its log file specifically for statistical data, and makecontent
also use a similar PSV format for data query.You can enable the time detail of the log by setting
enable_Detailed_Time
inLoggerConfig
to true. By default, the time recorded by Logger is only accurate to the second and does not include the date, corresponding to the formatted stringHH:mm:ss
.
After enabling time details, it will display the details of the log submission time up to one-seventh of a second, and the corresponding formatted string isyyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss fff ffff
, the two partsfff
andffff
represent the millisecond level and the ten-thousandth of a millisecond (100 nanoseconds, 0.1 microseconds) level, such as2023-08-22 15:43:36 456 4362
. This configuration requires global unity and is effective for both console and log file output.If the program uses CommandLineParser, please redirect its output
TextWriter
. Use code as follows:public readonly static Parser DefaultCommandsParser = new Parser(config => { // Set custom ConsoleWriter during construction config.HelpWriter = TextWriter.Synchronized(new LogTextWriter("CommandLineParser")); });
If you're using
ConsoleWrapper
, you'd better subscribe eventConsoleWrapper.ShutDownRequested
to do certain responses when the user pressing Ctrl+C. Notice thatsender
andargs
provided by theEventHandler
make no sense.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net6.0 is compatible. net6.0-android was computed. net6.0-ios was computed. net6.0-maccatalyst was computed. net6.0-macos was computed. net6.0-tvos was computed. net6.0-windows was computed. net7.0 was computed. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net6.0
- TextCopy (>= 6.2.1)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated | |
---|---|---|---|
5.0.0 | 265 | 7/16/2024 | |
4.0.2 | 351 | 12/22/2023 | |
4.0.1 | 370 | 11/6/2023 | |
4.0.0 | 358 | 9/23/2023 | |
3.0.0 | 343 | 7/13/2023 | |
2.2.3 | 316 | 6/9/2023 | |
2.2.2 | 203 | 5/31/2023 | |
2.2.1 | 217 | 5/6/2023 | |
2.1.4 | 267 | 4/15/2023 | |
2.1.3 | 228 | 4/15/2023 | |
2.1.2 | 223 | 4/9/2023 | |
2.1.1 | 226 | 4/9/2023 | |
2.1.0 | 238 | 4/8/2023 | |
2.0.1 | 224 | 4/8/2023 | |
2.0.0 | 276 | 4/8/2023 |
Breaking changes in v4.0.0
- The property `Log.CustomConfig` is renamed to `Log.GlobalConfig`, and an access attempt to `Log.GlobalConfig` before invoking `Log.Initialize` will raise `InvalidOperationException`.
- Now if the user indicates to use the program path (provided `false` for `LoggerConfig.Use_Working_Directory`) during `Log.Initialize` and it cannot be accessed, compared with the previous implementation, it will not issue a warning that the program will fallback to the working directory. Similarly, there will be no warning prompts if an error occurs when compressing past log files.
- **IMPORTANT**: In the new version, the default color Logger using in Console is changed to `ConsoleColor.Gray` to be consistent to most Console implements. You can also change this setting by `Log.GlobalDefaultColor` property now.
- **IMPORTANT**: In the new version, when `Log.Initialize` processing past logs, not only `latest.log` and `latest.debug.log`, but **any log files under the `logs` folder that match the pattern `latest.*.log`** will be renamed to the last time they were written.
They are also affected by automatic log compression, but this is actually consistent with past behavior.
- Now if invoking `Log.Initialize` or `BaseLogger.Initialize` on platforms not supporting the Console with `LoggerConfig.Console_Minimum_LogLevel` not set to `LogLevel.None`, an exception will be immerdiately thrown.
You can also use this logger on these platforms, but outputing logs to the Console should be disabled. Windows, macOS, Linux are treated as supported platforms currently.
- Now at the end of the program, the leave time given to Logger is 1000ms, and the leave time given to console output (whether it is normal output or `ConsoleWrapper`) is 500ms (it will only be performed after Logger's cleaning work is completed). In previous versions, these two numbers were 300ms and 1200ms respectively.
- The color judgment uses a new algorithm, so it may not be "bug compatible" with the previous implementation.
- `ConsoleWrapper` uses a new algorithm, developers try to put the breaking changes caused by it below, but the fixed bugs may not be listed.
- `ConsoleWrapper` used to support pasting multi-line text into the input with newline characters reserved (although there will be problems when modifying the text); now it does not support this function, and all newline characters pasted will be replaced with two spaces.
> The list of recognized newline sequences is CR (U+000D), LF (U+000A), CRLF (U+000D U+000A), NEL (U+0085), LS (U+2028), FF (U+000C), and PS (U+2029). This list is given by the Unicode Standard, Sec. 5.8, Recommendation R4 and Table 5-2.
However, if your program utilizes the "converting newline characters to spaces for a single input" feature, you may prompt the user to use `Ctrl`+`Alt`+`V` in Windows Terminal.
- `ConsoleWrapper` now supports history merging similar to bash, that is, executing a command multiple times in a row will not leave multiple records in history.
- `ConsoleWrapper` will no longer include unconfirmed input in the command history. Therefore, pressing the up/down arrow keys will not include unconfirmed input. For example, if you enter `1[Enter]2[Enter][Up Arrow][Enter]` **without any thread waiting for `ConsoleWrapper.ReadLine`**, the third call to `ConsoleWrapper.ReadLine` will return an empty string (in previous versions, it would return `2`).
- The new reading method of `ConsoleWrapper` is similar to [GNU Readline](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Readline), but this causes a conflict with the past behavior of Ctrl+C, so the function of Ctrl+C triggering the `ConsoleWrapper.ShutDownRequest` event is retained. In addition to this, all other functions of the attached GNU readline shortcut keys can be regarded as breaking changes.
- In order to support the input of Chinese and full-width characters and other wide characters, while avoiding the processing of various corner cases, now `ConsoleWrapper` reduces the number of characters that can fit in a single line by 1 bit, which is reserved as the extra space for full-width characters.
- Now, if a command input line have characters exceeding the console window, it won't be recorded in the input history. You can set `ConsoleWrapper.HistoryMaximumChars` to change the default behaviour.
Set it to a positive value can apply the limit, 0 can stop the history (since then), and -1 can cancel the limit.
- This project will not be backward compatible with any version below `.NET 6.0` in the future, including `.NET Standard 2.1`.
Changes in v4.0.1
- Fixed the issue whereby the file created in the constructor of `BaseLogger` using the overload `BaseLogger(LoggerConfig, LogFileConfig)` could not be utilized in the overload `BaseLogger(LoggerConfig, string)`.
- Fixed the issue whereby after using the overload `BaseLogger(LoggerConfig, LogFileConfig)` in the constructor of `BaseLogger`, multiple files with the same name or only case-insensitive differences were allowed to be created without checks.
These fixes also apply to other similar overloads.
Changes in v4.0.0
This version almost re-implements the entire logger, extracting the main functions of the static class `Log` and encapsulating them into `BaseLogger`. The original functions are not affected and some bugs have been fixed, but there may be some breaking changes.
Please note that although `BaseLogger` is a complete log implementation, you must first call `Log.Initialize` to use it. In addition, although different initialization `LoggerConfig` can be provided for each `BaseLogger`, its key fields must be consistent with the version provided when `Log.Initialize`, to keep the behavior of Logger consistent throughout the program.
The affected fields at this stage are: `Use_Console_Wrapper`, `Use_Working_Directory`, `Max_Output_Char_Count`, `Enable_Detailed_Time`.
Main changes:
- Fixed the problem that due to the defect of the timing algorithm, the log processing background task will not wait for the specified time after processing the log.
- Fixed the problem that in most cases, the waiting time for cleaning (1.5s) will reach the maximum value, and it is still possible that the console cleaning cannot be completed.
- Fixed the problem that when not reading input by `ConsoleWrapper`, event `ConsoleWrapper.ShutDownRequest` cannot be triggered by pressing Ctrl+C, until someone starting reading input again.
- Fixed the problem that in certain conditions, `ConsoleWrapper` accepts invalid characters.
- Fixed the problem that when providing some log methods and members including `Log.PushLog` with invalid `LogLevel`, the logs will enter the handle queue and possibly make the handle thread crash.
- A new KMP-based algorithm is used to analyze color tag information, which speeds up processing. See [Benchmark data](https://github.com/YYHEggEgg/csharp-logger/blob/main/ColorLineUtil-report-github.md) for details.
- Added `LogTextWriter` that implements the abstract class `TextWriter`. But note that it uses a buffer to maintain characters that have not been wrapped; that is, all content before the newline character is not displayed in `Logger`.
If some external code uses `Console`'s methods and you use `ConsoleWrapper` (such as `CommandLineParser`), you must provide an instance of `LogTextWriter` for it.
- To make `sender` param not required for each time of logging, `LoggerChannel` is added. For code that implements a certain logic, it usually passes the same `sender` parameter when calling the `Log` method, in which condition you can create `LoggerChannel` with this `sender` to reduce the amount of code and increase maintainability.
- Some static methods pointing to the corresponding methods of `BaseLogger` were created in the `Log` static class.
- Now you can set whether to enable time details by setting `LoggerConfig.Enable_Detailed_Time`. By default, the time recorded by Logger is only accurate to the second and does not include the date, corresponding to the formatted string `HH:mm:ss`.
After enabling time details, the details of the log submission time up to one-seventh of a second will be displayed. The corresponding formatted string is `yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss fff ffff`. The two parts `fff` and `ffff` represent the millisecond level and the ten-thousandth of a millisecond (100 nanoseconds, 0.1 microseconds) level, such as `2023-08-22 15:43:36 456 4362`. This configuration requires global unity and is effective for both console and log file output.
- When creating a new log file, you can use `LogFileConfig.IsPipeSeparatedFormat` to indicate whether the created log file is a pipe-separated value file (PSV).
Outputting the log as a table is helpful for analysis when the data volume is extremely large, especially if a large amount of modular code in the program does not change the sender parameter when calling the Log method. This configuration does not affect the content output to the console, and for some performance considerations, currently only `|` is accepted as the separator. The output format is:
```log
[time]|[level]|[sender]|[content]
23:14:17|Warn|TestSender|Push a warning log!
```
- Now you can provide a `basedlogger` parameter for `LogTraceListener` and `LogTextWriter` to change their output target `BaseLogger`. The default value is still `Log.GlobalBasedLogger` shared by the global static class `Log`.
- Some codes of [tonerdo/readline](https://github.com/tonerdo/readline) are used to implement the new version of `ConsoleWrapper`. But please note that this version of the nuget package does not include references to the nuget package [ReadLine](ReadLine), nor does it include the `ReadLine` class. All operations are still encapsulated as `ConsoleWrapper`.
- The experience of modifying text when the text volume is large in `ConsoleWrapper` has been greatly improved.
- Now setting `ConsoleWrapper.AutoCompleteHandler` can auto-complete user input.
- Optimized the method indication in the `Log`, `BaseLogger` and `LoggerChannel` classes.
- Now you can indicate that the content of the current line should not be included in the command input history by using `ConsoleWrapper.ReadLine(false)`. This is useful when prompting the user to input information that is specific to a certain context (e.g., a confirmation prompt like `Type 'y' to confirm, 'n' to refuse`).