357 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
357 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
*CSApprox.txt* Bringing GVim colorschemes to the terminal!
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*csapprox* *csapprox.vim*
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_____ ____ ___ ~
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/ ___// __// _ | ___ ___ ____ ___ __ __ ~
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/ /__ _\ \ / __ | / _ \ / _ \ / __// _ \ \ \ / ~
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\___//___//_/ |_|/ .__// .__//_/ \___//_\_\ ~
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/_/ /_/ ~
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For Vim version 7.0 or newer
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Last changed 12 Sep 2008
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By Matt Wozniski
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mjw@drexel.edu
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Reference Manual~
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*csapprox-toc*
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1. Description |csapprox-intro|
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2. Requirements |csapprox-requirements|
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3. Configuration |csapprox-configure|
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4. Rationale/Design |csapprox-design|
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5. Known Bugs and Limitations |csapprox-limitations|
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6. Appendix - Terminals and Palettes |csapprox-terminal-list|
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7. Changelog |csapprox-changelog|
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8. Contact Info |csapprox-author|
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The functionality mentioned here is a plugin, see |add-plugin|.
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You can avoid loading this plugin by setting the "CSApprox_loaded" global
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variable in your |vimrc| file: >
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:let g:CSApprox_loaded = 1
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==============================================================================
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1. Description *csapprox-intro*
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There is a wealth of colorschemes available for Vim. Unfortunately, since
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traditional terminal emulators have only supported 2, 8 or 16 colors,
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colorscheme authors have tended to avoid writing colorschemes for terminal
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Vim, sticking instead to GVim. Even now that nearly every popular terminal
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supports either 88 or 256 colors, few colorschemes are written to support
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them. This may be because the terminal color codes are just numbers from 0 to
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87 or 255 with no semantic meaning, or because the same number doesn't yield
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the same color in all terminals, or simply because the colorscheme author
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doesn't use the terminal and doesn't want to take the time to support
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terminals.
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Whatever the reason, this leaves users of many modern terminal emulators in
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the awkward position of having a terminal emulator that supports many colors,
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but having very few colorschemes that were written to utilize those colors.
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This is where CSApprox comes in. It attempts to fill this void by making GVim
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colorschemes transparently backwards compatible with terminal Vim in a high
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color terminal. Basically, whenever a colorscheme sets some colors for the
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GUI, this script runs and tries to figure out the closest color available in
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the terminal's color palette to the color the colorscheme author wanted.
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Unfortunately, this does not work well all the time, and it has some
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limitations (see |csapprox-limitations|). Most of the time, however, this
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gives a very close approximation to the GVim colors without requiring any
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changes to the colorscheme, or any user interaction.
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==============================================================================
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2. Requirements *csapprox-requirements*
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For CSApprox to work, there are 2 major requirements that must be met.
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a) GUI support *csapprox-gui-support* *csapprox-+gui*
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The "vim" binary must be built with GUI support (see |csapprox-limitations|
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for an explanation). Unfortunately, several Linux distributions only include
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GUI support in their "gvim" binary, and not in their "vim" binary. You can
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check if GUI support is available by doing: >
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:echo has('gui')
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If you are in an environment where the "vim" binary does not include GUI
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support, but where a "gvim" binary is available, you can probably launch Vim
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with GUI support anyway using the |-v| flag in the shell: >
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gvim -v
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If that does not work and no package with GUI support is available, you will
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need to compile Vim yourself and ensure that GUI support is included. If this
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is inconvenient for you, make sure that the Vim maintainer for your
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distribution knows it.
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b) Properly configured terminal *csapprox-terminal*
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As said above, many modern terminals support 88 or 256 colors, but most of
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these default to setting $TERM to something generic (usually "xterm"). Since
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Vim uses the value of the "colors" attribute for the current $TERM in terminfo
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to figure out the number of colors used internally as 't_Co', this plugin will
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either need for 't_Co' to be set to 88 or 256 in |vimrc|, or for $TERM to be
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set to something that implies high color support. Possible choices include
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"xterm-256color" for 256 color support and "rxvt-unicode" for 88 color
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support.
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Also, there are three different 256 color cube palettes available and CSApprox
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has no way to tell which you're using unless $TERM is set to something that is
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specific to the terminal, like "konsole" or "Eterm". Because of this, the
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most sane behavior is assuming the user is using the most popular palette,
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which is used by all but Konsole and Eterm, whenever $TERM is set to something
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generic like 'xterm' or 'screen'. You can provide a different default,
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however - see |csapprox-configuration|.
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*csapprox-terminal-example*
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To turn on high color support without fixing $TERM, you can put something like
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this into your |vimrc|: >
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if &term == 'xterm' && $HOSTNAME == 'my-machine'
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" On my machine, I use Konsole with 256 color support
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set t_Co=256
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let g:CSApprox_konsole = 1
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endif
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==============================================================================
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3. Configuration *csapprox-configure*
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There are several global variables that can be set to configure the behavior
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of CSApprox. They are listed roughly based on the likelihood that the end
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user might want to know about them.
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g:CSApprox_loaded *g:CSApprox_loaded*
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If set in your |vimrc|, CSApprox is not loaded.
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g:CSApprox_verbose_level *g:CSApprox_verbose_level*
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While running, CSApprox sets 'verbose' to this value (default 1). This
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allows CSApprox to default to warning whenever something might be wrong,
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but allows the user to disable this behavior if he wants. The most
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important messages will be shown at verbosity level 1, some less important
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ones will be shown at verbosity level 2. Internal errors and
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configuration errors are shown regardless of verbosity level.
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g:CSApprox_eterm *g:CSApprox_eterm*
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If set, CSApprox will use the Eterm palette when 'term' is "xterm" or
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"screen*". Otherwise, the xterm palette would be used.
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g:CSApprox_konsole *g:CSApprox_konsole*
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If set, CSApprox will use the Konsole palette when 'term' is "xterm" or
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"screen*". Otherwise, the xterm palette would be used.
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g:CSApprox_attr_map *g:CSApprox_attr_map*
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Since some attributes (like 'guisp') can't be used in a terminal, and
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others (like 'italic') are often very ugly in terminals, a generic way to
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map between a requested attribute and another attribute is included. This
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variable should be set to a Dictionary, where the keys are strings
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representing the attributes the author wanted set, and the values are the
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strings that the user wants set instead. If a value is '', it means the
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attribute should just be ignored. The default is to replace 'italic' with
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'underline', and to use 'fg' instead of 'sp': >
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let g:CSApprox_attr_map = { 'italic' : 'underline', 'sp' : 'fg' }
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<
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Your author prefers disabling bold and italic entirely, so uses this: >
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let g:CSApprox_attr_map = { 'bold' : '', 'italic' : '', 'sp' : 'fg' }
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<
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Note: You can only map an attribute representing a color to another
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attribute representing a color; likewise with boolean attributes.
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After all, sp -> bold and italic -> fg would be nonsensical.
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g:CSApprox_extra_rgb_txt_dirs *g:CSApprox_extra_rgb_txt_dirs*
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When the colorscheme author uses a color by name, CSApprox needs to figure
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out what #rrggbb value it stands for. It does this by parsing rgb.txt,
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but first needs to locate it. It has a default search path included, but
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should it fail to find rgb.txt, this variable can be set to a List of
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other directories that ought to be searched. Default search path: >
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[ /usr/local/share/X11, /usr/share/X11, /etc/X11, /usr/local/lib/X11,
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/usr/lib/X11, /usr/local/X11R6/lib/X11, /usr/X11R6/lib/X11]
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g:CSApprox_approximator_function *g:CSApprox_approximator_function*
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If the default approximation function doesn't work well enough, the user
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(or another author wishing to extend this plugin) can write another
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approximation function. This function should take three numbers,
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representing r, g, and b in decimal, and return the index on the color
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cube that best matches those colors. Assigning a |Funcref| to this
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variable will override the default approximator with the one the Funcref
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references.
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g:CSApprox_redirfallback *g:CSApprox_redirfallback*
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As of Vim 7.2.018, there is a bug in the Vim function synIDattr() that
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stops it from correctly reporting information for the 'guisp' attribute.
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CSApprox includes a workaround for this problem, as well as a test that
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ought to disable this workaround once synIDattr() is working properly.
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If this test should happen to give improper results somehow, the user can
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force the behavior with this variable. When set to 1, the workaround will
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always be used, and when set to 0, synIDattr() is blindly used.
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==============================================================================
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4. Rationale/Design *csapprox-design*
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Ideally, the aim is for CSApprox to be completely transparent to the user.
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This is why the approach I take is entirely different from the GuiColorScheme
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script, which will break on any but the simplest colorschemes. Unfortunately,
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given the difficulty of determining exactly which terminal emulator the user
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is running, and what features it supports, and which color palette it's using,
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perfect transparency is difficult. So, to this end, I've attempted to default
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to settings that make it unlikely that this script ever makes things worse
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(this is why I chose not to override t_Co to 256 myself), and I've attempted
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to make it easy to override my choice of defaults when necessary (through
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g:CSApprox_approximator_function, g:CSApprox_konsole, g:CSApprox_eterm,
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g:CSApprox_attr_map, etc). If any of my choices seem to be causing extra work
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with no real advantages, though, I'd like to hear about it. Feel free to
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email me with any improvements upon my design you might want to suggest.
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==============================================================================
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5. Known Bugs and Limitations *csapprox-limitations*
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GUI support is required.
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There is nothing I can do about this given my chosen design. CSApprox works
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by being notified every time a colorscheme sets some GUI colors, then
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approximating those colors to similar terminal colors. Unfortunately, when
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Vim is not built with GUI support, it doesn't bother to store the GUI
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colors, so querying for them fails. This leaves me completely unable to
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tell what the colorscheme was trying to do. See |csapprox-+gui| for some
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potential work arounds if your distribution doesn't provide a Vim with +gui.
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User intervention is sometimes required for information about the terminal.
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This is really an insurmountable problem. Unfortunately, most terminal
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emulators default to setting $TERM to 'xterm', even when they're not really
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compatible with an xterm. $TERM is really the only reliable way to
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find anything at all out about the terminal you're running in, so there's no
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way to know if the terminal supports 88 or 256 colors without either the
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terminal telling me (using $TERM) or the user telling me (using t_Co).
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Similarly, unless $TERM is set to something that implies a certain color
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palette ought to be used, there's no way for me to know, so I'm forced to
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default to the most common, xterm's palette, and allow the user to override
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my choice with |g:CSApprox_konsole| or |g:CSApprox_eterm|. An example of
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configuring Vim to work around a terminal where $TERM is set to something
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generic without configuring the terminal properly is shown at
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|csapprox-terminal-example|.
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Some colorschemes could fail if they try to be too smart.
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A colorscheme could decide to only set colors for the mode Vim is running
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in. If a scheme only sets GUI colors when the GUI is running, instead of
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using the usual approach of setting all colors and letting Vim choose which
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to use, my approach falls apart. My method for figuring out what the scheme
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author wants the scheme to look like absolutely depends upon him setting the
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GUI colors in all modes. Fortunately, the few colorschemes that do this
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seem to be, by and large, intended for 256 color terminals already, meaning
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that skipping them is the proper behavior.
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It's slow.
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For me, it takes Vim's startup time from 0.15 seconds to 0.45 seconds. This
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is probably still acceptable, but it is definitely worth trying to cut down
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on this time in future versions.
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==============================================================================
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6. Appendix - Terminals and Palettes *csapprox-terminal-list*
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What follows is a list of terminals known to have and known not to have high
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color support. This list is certainly incomplete; feel free to contact me
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with more to add to either list.
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*csapprox-terminals-good*
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------------------------------- Good Terminals -------------------------------
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The most recent versions of each of these terminals can be compiled with
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either 88 or 256 color support.
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*csapprox-xterm*
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xterm:
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256 color palette
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Colors composed of: [ 0x00, 0x5F, 0x87, 0xAF, 0xD7, 0xFF ]
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Greys composed of: [ 0x08, 0x12, 0x1C, 0x26, 0x30, 0x3A, 0x44, 0x4E,
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0x58, 0x62, 0x6C, 0x76, 0x80, 0x8A, 0x94, 0x9E,
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0xA8, 0xB2, 0xBC, 0xC6, 0xD0, 0xDA, 0xE4, 0xEE ]
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*csapprox-urxvt*
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rxvt-unicode (urxvt):
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88 colors by default (but a patch is available to use xterm's palette)
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Colors composed of: [ 0x00, 0x8B, 0xCD, 0xFF ]
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Greys composed of: [ 0x2E, 0x5C, 0x73, 0x8B, 0xA2, 0xB9, 0xD0, 0xE7 ]
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*csapprox-pterm* *csapprox-putty*
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PuTTY (pterm; putty.exe):
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256 colors; same palette as xterm
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*csapprox-mrxvt*
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Mrxvt (mrxvt):
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256 colors; same palette as xterm
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*csapprox-gnome-terminal*
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GNOME Terminal (gnome-terminal):
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256 colors; same palette as xterm
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*csapprox-roxterm*
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ROXTerm (roxterm):
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256 colors; same palette as xterm
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*csapprox-xfce4-terminal*
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Terminal (xfce4-terminal):
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256 colors; same palette as xterm
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*csapprox-iterm.app*
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iTerm (iTerm.app):
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256 colors; same palette as xterm
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*csapprox-konsole*
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Konsole (konsole):
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256 color palette
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Colors composed of: [ 0x00, 0x33, 0x66, 0x99, 0xCC, 0xFF ]
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Same greyscales as xterm
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You should set the g:CSApprox_konsole variable unless $TERM begins with
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'konsole', case insensitive
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*csapprox-eterm*
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eterm (Eterm):
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256 color palette
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Colors composed of: [ 0x00, 0x2A, 0x55, 0x7F, 0xAA, 0xD4 ]
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Same greyscales as xterm
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You should set the g:CSApprox_eterm variable unless $TERM begins with
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'eterm', case insensitive
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*csapprox-screen*
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GNU Screen (screen):
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256 color support. Internally, uses the xterm palette, but this is only
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relevant when running screen inside a terminal with fewer than 256 colors,
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in which case screen will attempt to map between its own 256 color cube
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and the colors supported by the real terminal to the best of its ability.
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*csapprox-terminals-bad*
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-------------------------------- Bad Terminals -------------------------------
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This is a list of terminals known *_not_* to have high color support:
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*csapprox-terminal.app*
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Terminal.app (as of OS X 10.5.2)
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*csapprox-aterm*
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aterm (as of version 1.00.01)
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*csapprox-xiterm*
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xiterm (as of version 0.5)
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*csapprox-wterm*
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wterm (as of version 6.2.9)
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*csapprox-mlterm*
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mlterm (as of version 2.9.4)
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*csapprox-kterm*
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kterm (as of version 6.2.0)
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==============================================================================
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7. Changelog *csapprox-changelog*
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0.90 14 Sep 2008 Initial beta release
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==============================================================================
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8. Contact Info *csapprox-author*
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Your author, a Vim nerd with some free time, was sick of seeing terminals
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always get the short end of the stick. He'd like to be notified of any
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problems you find - after all, he took the time to write all this lovely
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documentation, and this plugin, which took more time than you could possibly
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imagine to get working transparently for every colorscheme he could get his
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hands on. You can contact him with any problems or praises at mjw@drexel.edu
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==============================================================================
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vim:tw=78:fo=tcq2:isk=!-~,^*,^\|,^\":ts=8:ft=help:norl:
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