From e28cbe19785d13cd3e1990805440ef44521ab110 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Huy Zing Date: Tue, 31 May 2011 00:53:18 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Put long terminal explanation lower --- README.mkd | 195 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------------------- 1 file changed, 97 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.mkd b/README.mkd index ab668ea..302780e 100644 --- a/README.mkd +++ b/README.mkd @@ -17,104 +17,6 @@ See the [Solarized] homepage for screenshots, details and color theme implementations for terminal emulators and other applications, such as Vim, Emacs, and Mutt. -Understanding Solarized Colors in Terminals -------------------------------------------- - -### Solarized Colors vs. ANSI Colors ### - -8-color terminal programs such as irssi use color codes that correspond to the -expected 8 normal ANSI colors. irssi additionally supports bold, which -terminal emulators will usually display by using the *bright* versions of the 8 -ANSI colors and/or by using a bold typeface with a heavier weight. (Note that -different terminal emulators may have slightly different ideas of what color -values to use when displaying the 16 [ANSI color escape -codes](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Colors).) - -In order to be displayed by 8-color terminal programs, which cannot specify RGB -values, Solarized must replace the default ANSI colors. Since the Solarized -palette uses 16 colors, not only must this color scheme replace the 8 normal -colors but must also take over the 8 *bright* colors, for a total of 16 colors. -This means that a Solarized terminal application loses the ability to bold text -but gains 8 more Solarized colors. - -About half of the Solarized palette is reminiscent of the original ANSI -colors, e.g. Solarized red is close to ANSI red (or more precisely, the -general consensus of what ANSI red should look like). But the rest of the -Solarized colors do not correspond to any ANSI colors, e.g. there is no ANSI -color that corresponds to Solarized orange or purple. - -This means that, for example, if the irssi theme wants to display "green", a -Solarized terminal will display something close to green, but if the theme -wants to display "bold yellow" or "bright yellow", a Solarized terminal will -not be able to display it. However, a Solarized theme will be able to display -the new colors orange and purple and also several shades of gray. This is -again thanks to the replacement of the ANSI *bright* colors; e.g. ANSI "bold -red", which is usually displayed as "bright red", will now show as Solarized -orange, while ANSI "bold blue", which is usually displayed as "bright blue", -will now be a shade of gray. - -### Terminal Emulator ### - -Because irssi is an ANSI 8-color terminal program, it is entirely dependent on -the terminal emulator for the display of its colors. You cannot directly tell -an irssi theme to display Solarized orange, e.g. by specifying an RGB value. -Instead, the theme's colors must be chosen using the ANSI color codes with the -expectation that the terminal emulator will display them as appropriate -Solarized colors. For example, the irssi color format `%R` which normally -would be "bold red" is expected to be displayed by the terminal emulator as -Solarized orange. - -So in order for irssi to display the Solarized palette, you have to set your -Terminal emulator's color settings to the Solarized palette. The [Solarized -repository] includes theme settings for some popular terminal emulators as -well as Xdefaults; or you can download them from the official [Solarized] -homepage. If you use the irssi themes *without* having changed your -emulator's palette, you will get a strange selection of colors that may be -hard to read. - -Yes, this means that, to use the Solarized theme for irssi, you need to change -color settings for not one but two different programs: your terminal emulator -and irssi. The two sets of settings will work in concert to display Solarized -colors appropriately. - -### Bold Settings ### - -Historically, there has been a one-to-one correspondence between the bolded -versions of the 8 default ANSI colors and the bright versions of the 8 default -colors. Back in the day, when a color program demanded the display of bold -text, it was probably just easier for terminal emulators to display a brighter -version of whatever color the text was (and expect the user to interpret that -as bold) than to display a typeface with a bold weight - -Nowadays, it is easy for terminal emulators to display bold typefaces, so it -doesn't make sense for bolded text to change color, but the confusing -association remains. In fact, new terminal emulators allow users to break the -correspondence between bold and bright and can simply change the font. - -However, ANSI 8-color terminal applications such as irssi only have a -conception of bold and don't know about the possibility of using up to 16 -colors. So to use all 16 Solarized colors, we change the semantics of "bold" -in the theme to mean that we want to access the 8 new Solarized colors, -including the grays. Recall the example above, where we described that the -irssi color format `%R`, which would have normally displayed bold red, is -expected to show up as Solarized orange. - -This is why it is important to *not* break the association between bold and -bright colors. Many terminal emulators offer an option to disable the use of -bright colors for bold, and you must not do so. Often, new users of Solarized -will be confused when they change their terminal emulator's color palette to -Solarized but haven't yet installed Solarized-specific color themes for all -their terminal applications (e.g. mutt, ls's dircolors, irssi, and their -colorized shell prompts). They will see texts that are hard to read or -disappear entirely. The solution isn't to disable bright colors; the solution -is to install Solarized color themes for all terminal applications and then you -will have all 16 colors. - -Also, because the semantics of "bold" are lost in favor of more colors, it -also makes sense to disable the display of bold text as a bold typeface. It -won't hurt to see bold typefaces wherever the new 8 Solarized colors are -displayed but it doesn't make much sense anymore. - Universal theme --------------- @@ -276,6 +178,103 @@ Installation ... }; +Understanding Solarized Colors in Terminals +------------------------------------------- + +### Solarized Colors vs. ANSI Colors ### + +8-color terminal programs such as irssi use color codes that correspond to the +expected 8 normal ANSI colors. irssi additionally supports bold, which +terminal emulators will usually display by using the *bright* versions of the 8 +ANSI colors and/or by using a bold typeface with a heavier weight. (Note that +different terminal emulators may have slightly different ideas of what color +values to use when displaying the 16 [ANSI color escape +codes](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Colors).) + +In order to be displayed by 8-color terminal programs, which cannot specify RGB +values, Solarized must replace the default ANSI colors. Since the Solarized +palette uses 16 colors, not only must this color scheme replace the 8 normal +colors but must also take over the 8 *bright* colors, for a total of 16 colors. +This means that a Solarized terminal application loses the ability to bold text +but gains 8 more Solarized colors. + +About half of the Solarized palette is reminiscent of the original ANSI +colors, e.g. Solarized red is close to ANSI red (or more precisely, the +general consensus of what ANSI red should look like). But the rest of the +Solarized colors do not correspond to any ANSI colors, e.g. there is no ANSI +color that corresponds to Solarized orange or purple. + +This means that, for example, if the irssi theme wants to display "green", a +Solarized terminal will display something close to green, but if the theme +wants to display "bold yellow" or "bright yellow", a Solarized terminal will +not be able to display it. However, a Solarized theme will be able to display +the new colors orange and purple and also several shades of gray. This is +again thanks to the replacement of the ANSI *bright* colors; e.g. ANSI "bold +red", which is usually displayed as "bright red", will now show as Solarized +orange, while ANSI "bold blue", which is usually displayed as "bright blue", +will now be a shade of gray. + +### Terminal Emulator ### + +Because irssi is an ANSI 8-color terminal program, it is entirely dependent on +the terminal emulator for the display of its colors. You cannot directly tell +an irssi theme to display Solarized orange, e.g. by specifying an RGB value. +Instead, the theme's colors must be chosen using the ANSI color codes with the +expectation that the terminal emulator will display them as appropriate +Solarized colors. For example, the irssi color format `%R` which normally +would be "bold red" is expected to be displayed by the terminal emulator as +Solarized orange. + +So in order for irssi to display the Solarized palette, you have to set your +Terminal emulator's color settings to the Solarized palette. The [Solarized +repository] includes theme settings for some popular terminal emulators as +well as Xdefaults; or you can download them from the official [Solarized] +homepage. If you use the irssi themes *without* having changed your +emulator's palette, you will get a strange selection of colors that may be +hard to read. + +Yes, this means that, to use the Solarized theme for irssi, you need to change +color settings for not one but two different programs: your terminal emulator +and irssi. The two sets of settings will work in concert to display Solarized +colors appropriately. + +### Bold Settings ### + +Historically, there has been a one-to-one correspondence between the bolded +versions of the 8 default ANSI colors and the bright versions of the 8 default +colors. Back in the day, when a color program demanded the display of bold +text, it was probably just easier for terminal emulators to display a brighter +version of whatever color the text was (and expect the user to interpret that +as bold) than to display a typeface with a bold weight + +Nowadays, it is easy for terminal emulators to display bold typefaces, so it +doesn't make sense for bolded text to change color, but the confusing +association remains. In fact, new terminal emulators allow users to break the +correspondence between bold and bright and can simply change the font. + +However, ANSI 8-color terminal applications such as irssi only have a +conception of bold and don't know about the possibility of using up to 16 +colors. So to use all 16 Solarized colors, we change the semantics of "bold" +in the theme to mean that we want to access the 8 new Solarized colors, +including the grays. Recall the example above, where we described that the +irssi color format `%R`, which would have normally displayed bold red, is +expected to show up as Solarized orange. + +This is why it is important to *not* break the association between bold and +bright colors. Many terminal emulators offer an option to disable the use of +bright colors for bold, and you must not do so. Often, new users of Solarized +will be confused when they change their terminal emulator's color palette to +Solarized but haven't yet installed Solarized-specific color themes for all +their terminal applications (e.g. mutt, ls's dircolors, irssi, and their +colorized shell prompts). They will see texts that are hard to read or +disappear entirely. The solution isn't to disable bright colors; the solution +is to install Solarized color themes for all terminal applications and then you +will have all 16 colors. + +Also, because the semantics of "bold" are lost in favor of more colors, it +also makes sense to disable the display of bold text as a bold typeface. It +won't hurt to see bold typefaces wherever the new 8 Solarized colors are +displayed but it doesn't make much sense anymore. The Solarized Color Values -- 2.20.1