On Thu, Apr 28, 2011 at 19:12, Ben Schmidt <[email protected]> wrote: >>> - Are you using a colour scheme? >> >> Woudn't this be set in '.vimrc'? > > Yes. It would be in some startup file if you were using one. I guess > :verbose hi would also show it up. > >>> - Does >>> :verbose hi >>> give any insight? I.e. are the colours being set by different files in >>> the different Vim versions?
The '.vimrc' is the same file for 'mih' and 'root'. >> >> I've redircted the output of ':verbose hi' along with the outputs of >> 'set' for both user and root earlier, and posted them in this thread, >> and they do differ. > > Yes; I glanced at that earlier. I didn't realise :verbose had been > included that time. > >>> - Does Vim give the same result for >>> :set term? >>> in each case? >> >> Yes, both: >> term=screen > > Interesting. Do you still have the problem if you're not running screen > (which presumably is why term is set that way)? $ urxvt $ echo $TERM rxvt-unicode $ vim -u NONE -U NONE --noplugin -N .vimrc :syntax on problem persists... Let's try something else: $ xterm $ echo $TERM xterm $ vim -u NONE -U NONE --noplugin -N .vimrc :syntax on <play zelda_fanfare.wav> HEY!!! That works! So it's seems to be a 'urxvt' problem then? Remains the confusing question, why does it affect the user and not root? Also, I've generated a new user 'cool', when I 'su cool', everything is displayed as it should be. mih > > I'll have a little look at Vim's source code and see if I can spot what > would make it set defaults differently re boldness, if Vim defaults > indeed appears to be where the differences originate.... > > Ben. -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
