![]() ![]() He also managed to find a pair of words all English speakers can agree on their spelling, which is an added bonus. ![]() If you’re going to spend most of your life looking at a shell, may as well make it as nice as it can be, and this is. The blue is one of my favourite schades, and the yellow has a clear and pleasing level of contrast. In a word, it’s refreshing, right down to the choice of minty-green and the slightly-off white which I’m a fan of (as evidenced by my site resign). I’d all but given up hope, until I found PencilLight by mattly. Nearly all the light themes I surveyed fit the first criteria, but not the second. For those who can’t pick it up, I’m being sarcastic. The name should be spelled correctly to fit my favourite colour spelling. I don’t think colours belong in a bashrc set as bold and let your terminal emulator pick it based on your circumstances (am I in an SSH session, or limited to 16 colours, etc). I first saw this used to great effect on NetBSD’s man pages, and use it everywhere now. I use light themes in the morning, and find blue and white visually fresh and stimulating.Ī distinct, different colour for bold text. I need bright colours in the morning to wake up, especially after a late night that may not have involved the aforementioned dark theme.īlue or white tints, not cream or yellow. This repository consists of 320+ syntax and UI themes for iTerm2. Includes iTerm2, Terminal, Konsole, PuTTY, Xresources, XRDB, Remina, Termite, XFCE, Tilda, FreeBSD VT, Terminator, Kitty, MobaXterm, LXTerminal, and Microsoft's Windows Terminal.
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