On 24Feb2020 20:15, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
On 2020-02-24, at 18:24:36, Cameron Simpson wrote:
The colours are requested with escape sequences and the colour
displayed are thus dependent on your terminal emulator; the names
"white" etc map to a palette. So you want to start with the settings
On 2020-02-24, at 18:24:36, Cameron Simpson wrote:
>
> The colours are requested with escape sequences and the colour displayed are
> thus dependent on your terminal emulator; the names "white" etc map to a
> palette. So you want to start with the settings in your terminal emulator.
>
> For
On 24Feb2020 15:43, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
On 2020-02-24, at 14:40:52, Cameron Simpson wrote:
On 24Feb2020 13:55, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
With my failing eyes, I'd like everything high contrast,
mostly black on white.
What's the natural colour scheme of your terminal?
Foreground black;
On 2020-02-24, at 14:40:52, Cameron Simpson wrote:
>
> On 24Feb2020 13:55, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
>> With my failing eyes, I'd like everything high contrast,
>> mostly black on white.
>
> What's the natural colour scheme of your terminal?
>
Foreground black; background white.
>> When I do in
On Tue, Feb 25, 2020 at 08:40:52AM +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 24Feb2020 13:55, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
> >With my failing eyes, I'd like everything high contrast,
> >mostly black on white.
>
> What's the natural colour scheme of your terminal?
>
> >When I do in .mutt/muttrc
> >color
On 24Feb2020 13:55, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
With my failing eyes, I'd like everything high contrast,
mostly black on white.
What's the natural colour scheme of your terminal?
When I do in .mutt/muttrc
color normalblack white
... I seem to get black on gray.
Odd. What about other colours