On Thursday 21 December 2006 13:41, Yedidyah Bar-David wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 21, 2006 at 12:49:24PM +0200, Ira Abramov wrote:
> > I love black background for my terminals, and the default of dark blue
> > for color-ls libraries and other elements can be very annoying. I could
> > use a .dircolors file to override the problem but what I really want is
> > to be able to change the definition of ANSI blue from #000080 or
> > whatever it is to something nicer, like I do in putty.
> >
> > I found this: http://www.thrysoee.dk/xtermcontrol/
>
> I have in my .Xresources:
> ! red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan
> XTerm*VT100*Color1:     #ff8080
> XTerm*VT100*Color2:     #b0ffb0
> XTerm*VT100*Color3:     #ffffb0
> XTerm*VT100*Color4:     #b0b0ff
> XTerm*VT100*Color5:     #ffb0ff
> XTerm*VT100*Color6:     #b0ffff
>
> I also use mlterm as someone suggested, mainly for reading Hebrew email,
> and I do not like it at all - its feeling is very different from xterm,
> e.g. in the selection. It also tends to add lots of whitespace to
> endoflines, which is also annoying when copying/pasting.
>
> I wish to spend some day some time and add decent Hebrew support to
> xterm. Either to itself directly, or some wrapper (e.g. patch screen or
> something like luit). Long live xterm!

rxvt-unicode is not too bad (the one I'm using right now), and it has some 
very basic tab support (either that or screen).

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