GitHub - junegunn/seoul256.vim: Low-contrast Vim color scheme based on Seoul Col...
source link: https://github.com/junegunn/seoul256.vim
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
README.md
" _____ _ ___ ___ ___ "
" | __|___ ___ _ _| |_ | _| _| "
" |__ | -_| . | | | | _|_ | . | "
" |_____|___|___|___|_|___|___|___|.vim "
seoul256.vim
seoul256.vim is a low-contrast Vim color scheme based on Seoul Colors. Works on 256-color terminal or on GVim.
seoul256
seoul256 (light version)
Installation
Use your favorite plugin manager.
- vim-plug
- Add
Plug 'junegunn/seoul256.vim'
to .vimrc - Run
:PlugInstall
- Add
Color schemes
" Unified color scheme (default: dark) colo seoul256 " Light color scheme colo seoul256-light " Switch set background=dark set background=light
Change background color
" seoul256 (dark): " Range: 233 (darkest) ~ 239 (lightest) " Default: 237 let g:seoul256_background = 236 colo seoul256 " seoul256 (light): " Range: 252 (darkest) ~ 256 (lightest) " Default: 253 let g:seoul256_background = 256 colo seoul256
If g:seoul256_background
is set, seoul256 will choose the right version based
on the value and set background=dark/light
will not switch versions.
If you'd like to switch versions with custom background colors, set
g:seoul256_background
to be a dark value, and additionally define
g:seoul256_light_background
for seoul256-light.
let g:seoul256_background = 233 let g:seoul256_light_background = 256 colo seoul256 colo seoul256-light
Alternate 256-xterm -> sRGB mapping
The GUI RGB colors are derived from 256-color-terminal color codes in the source code, with the help of a lookup table.
By default, the table contains RGB values of terminal colors as displayed by iTerm2 on macOS. If you're using another terminal emulator (urxvt, xfce4-terminal,... pretty much any terminal on Linux), the colors aren't displayed in the same way. That's why you may see a difference in color of GUI and terminal [n]vim in Linux.
If let g:seoul256_srgb
is set to 1, the color mapping is altered
to suit the way urxvt (and various other terminals) renders them. That way, the
colors of the terminal and GUI versions are uniformly colored on Linux.
let g:seoul256_srgb = 1
Current background color
When loaded, soul256.vim will set up two global variables so that you can use them to customize other plugins:
g:seoul256_current_fg
- Current foreground color in ANSI codeg:seoul256_current_bg
- Current background color in ANSI code
iTerm2 color scheme
Emacs color theme
Author
Junegunn Choi
License
MIT
Recommend
About Joyk
Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK