![]() ![]() There are actually some issues with colour output in other CLI applications, I suggest you to go and read Seebi article about dircolors and an ongoing(?) discussion on the solarized github issue tracker. Anyway, to use the 'fallback' you have to change the lines to the following: set t_Co=256 Does anyone know a good light high contrast colortheme For reference, I like the default vim theme with background'light', but the diffs are just very hard to read. Yeah, weird, most people would think that 256 > 16. ago by Crashocaster Light, High-contrast colortheme I really hate that all colorschemes seem to have low contrast colors that are hard to read, like gray on white. Contrary to what everyone could think, the 256 colour scheme is actually the 'fallback' being the 16 one the default. In my experience the 256 colour version is better (I like more grey background over a blue one but that's personal taste :P). The line set g:solarized_termcolors=16 is the default, so you can put it or not: it won't make any difference. But I rather be explicit than implicit (specially if you are going to sync your files between multiple computers). Solarized nvim (Dark/Light Theme) I currently work on solarized port for neovim, give a star give you like : ) 6 3 Related Topics Neovim Free Software 3 comments FreeAd7233 5 mo. Normally, the set t_Co=16 line is not necessary because most terminal emulators only support 16 colours (terminator for example). The correct configuration is the following (at least for the dark scheme): ] The problem is that that palette isn't right either :P, the correct one is the one a guy posted in an issue on that same repo. ![]() In terminator there is a github repo that holds the colour configuration for the dark and light scheme. As Ethan Schoonover pointed out in his vim colorscheme readme, to make the colorscheme work first you have to configure your terminal colour palette. ![]()
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