[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/
Skip to content

nanotech/jellybeans.vim

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

jellybeans.vim

A colorful, dark color scheme, inspired by ir_black and twilight.

Designed primarily for a graphical Vim, but includes support for 256, 88, 16, and 8 color terminals. On a 16 or 8 color terminal, replace its colors with those in ansi-term-colors.txt for best results.

This script is vimscript #2555 at Vim.org.

Jellybeans has also been ported to other editors and programs, listed on the Ports wiki page.

Scroll down for screenshots!

Installation

Install the color scheme by adding it to your ~/.vim/colors directory

mkdir -p ~/.vim/colors
cd ~/.vim/colors
curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nanotech/jellybeans.vim/master/colors/jellybeans.vim

Jellybeans can also be installed through plugin managers such as dein.vim, Pathogen, VAM, vim-plug, Vundle, etc.

To enable the jellybeans color scheme, use

:colorscheme jellybeans

If you are satisfied, you can add colorscheme jellybeans to your ~/.vimrc file (_vimrc in Windows).

Options

Custom Highlights

If you prefer slightly different colors from what Jellybeans defines, you can set g:jellybeans_overrides in your .vimrc to a dictionary of custom highlighting parameters:

let g:jellybeans_overrides = {
\    'Todo': { 'guifg': '303030', 'guibg': 'f0f000',
\              'ctermfg': 'Black', 'ctermbg': 'Yellow',
\              'attr': 'bold' },
\    'Comment': { 'guifg': 'cccccc' },
\}

This removes the need to edit Jellybeans directly, simplifying upgrades. In addition, RGB colors specified this way are run through the same color approximation algorithm that the core theme uses, so your colors work just as well in 256-color terminals.

If you can pick better colors than the approximator, specify them in the 256ctermfg and 256ctermbg parameters to override its choices.

Custom Background Colors

To set a custom background color, override the special background highlight group:

let g:jellybeans_overrides = {
\    'background': { 'guibg': '000000' },
\}

Jellybeans uses the background color in multiple highlight groups. Using the special background group overrides them all at once.

This replaces g:jellybeans_background_color and g:jellybeans_background_color_256 from Jellybeans versions before 1.6.

Terminal Background

If you would prefer to use your terminal's default background (e.g. for transparent backgrounds, image backgrounds, or a different color) instead of the background color that Jellybeans applies, use this background override code:

let g:jellybeans_overrides = {
\    'background': { 'ctermbg': 'none', '256ctermbg': 'none' },
\}
if has('termguicolors') && &termguicolors
    let g:jellybeans_overrides['background']['guibg'] = 'none'
endif

MatchParen Colors

Jellybeans sets alternate MatchParen colors (magenta on black) in some terminals to be more readable out of the box:

  • Apple's Terminal.app has default themes with cursor colors that are too close in brightness to Jellybeans' preferred MatchParen background color of #556779 to be clearly distinguishable.
  • Default 16-color terminal palettes don't typically have a color available that can approximate the preferred MatchParen background color.

If you use Terminal.app with a brighter cursor color, you can use the standard MatchParen colors with this override:

let g:jellybeans_overrides = {
\    'MatchParen': { 'guifg': 'ffffff', 'guibg': '556779' },
\}

To use the standard MatchParen colors in a 16-color terminal, configure Low-Color Black as described in the section below.

If you prefer the alternate MatchParen colors, you can use them everywhere with

let g:jellybeans_overrides = {
\    'MatchParen': { 'guifg': 'dd0093', 'guibg': '000000',
\                    'ctermfg': 'Magenta', 'ctermbg': '' },
\}

Added in version 1.7.

Italics

Jellybeans disables italics in terminal Vim by default, as some terminals do other things with the text's colors instead of actually italicizing the text. If your terminal does fully support italics, add

let g:jellybeans_use_term_italics = 1

to your .vimrc to enable italics in terminal Vim.

If you don't want italics even in GUI Vim, add

let g:jellybeans_use_gui_italics = 0

Low-Color Black (16 and 8 color terminals)

Since the background on a dark terminal is usually black already, Jellybeans can appropriate the black ANSI color as a dark grey and use no color when it really wants black.

After changing your terminal’s color palette (#444444 is suggested), add this to your .vimrc:

let g:jellybeans_use_lowcolor_black = 1

This option was changed to be disabled by default in version 1.7.

Screenshots

The font in the screenshot is 10pt Monaco:

set guifont=Monaco:h10 noanti