A dark 256-color color scheme for vim.
Have you ever wondered why most syntax highlighting of source code is about as subtle and pretty as a candy shop explosion? A technical reason is the historical constraints imposed by 16 color terminals, but fortunately this limitation is easy to overcome.
- Minimal colors, to avoid distracting:
- Shades of gray for most elements
- Bright keywords to highlight structure.
- Dark comments & strings to emphasize surrounding code.
- Red for exceptional elements (constants & errors)
- Works in
vim
andgvim
. Rudimentary support for 16-color terminals.
- Enable 256 colors in vim.
Note that when using
ssh
, both client and server need to be properly configured. - Put
256_noir.vim
in ~/.vim/colors/ - Add the following to
~/.vimrc
:
colorscheme 256_noir
" Change highlighting of cursor line when entering/leaving Insert Mode
set cursorline
highlight CursorLine cterm=NONE ctermfg=NONE ctermbg=233 guifg=NONE guibg=#121212
autocmd InsertEnter * highlight CursorLine cterm=NONE ctermfg=NONE ctermbg=234 guifg=NONE guibg=#1c1c1c
autocmd InsertLeave * highlight CursorLine cterm=NONE ctermfg=NONE ctermbg=233 guifg=NONE guibg=#121212
The font in the above screenshots is the default xterm bitmap font fixed at 6x13.
mc, add the following to e.g.
~/.bashrc
:export MC_SKIN=dark
mutt, add the following to
~/.muttrc
:color normal white default color status black white color indicator white red color hdrdefault yellow default color signature yellow default color attachment brightyellow default color markers brightred default color quoted green default color tilde blue default color tree red default
Other recommended terminal apps with dark colors by default: