Am 11.06.2007 um 09:53 schrieb Alexander Skwar:
Robert Welz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Am 04.04.2007 um 06:17 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Why do --nocolor and --color=n not work (sys-apps/portage-2.1.2.3)?
Why does the damned thing default to thinking I want blaring bizarre
colors scattered
Robert Welz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Am 04.04.2007 um 06:17 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Why do --nocolor and --color=n not work (sys-apps/portage-2.1.2.3)?
Why does the damned thing default to thinking I want blaring bizarre
colors scattered all over my screen?
Because it makes things
On 2007-06-10, Kevin O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I also dislike the colorization, but for a more specific
reason. Gentoo seems to assume one is using white on black
rather than the default black on white in terminal windows.
This makes yellow lettering entirely unreadable to me.
Same
On Sunday 10 June 2007, Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
about '[gentoo-user] Re: FeatureRequest Was: Re: Why are gentoo people so
in love with colorized output?!?':
I don't care how you label it, white-on-black is nasty. ;)
I feel the same way about black-on-white terminals. Acually,
On Sunday 10 June 2007, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Re: FeatureRequest Was: Re: Why are gentoo
people so in love with colorized output?!?':
Acually, I'd prefer
black-on-white
I meant white-on-black. Dark backgrounds are just easier on my eyes.
On Sun, 10 Jun 2007 18:22:27 -0500
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sunday 10 June 2007, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Re:
FeatureRequest Was: Re: Why are gentoo people so in love with
colorized output?!?':
I meant white-on-black.
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