Version 1.4.1 - Added a few improvements for HTML and XML.
Updated in the AUR
]]>let g:kolor_italic=1 " Enable italic. Default: 1
let g:kolor_bold=1 " Enable bold. Default: 1
let g:kolor_underlined=0 " Enable underline for 'Underlined'. Default: 0
let g:kolor_alternative_matchparen=0 " Gray 'MatchParen' color. Default: 0
kolorBlack #262626
kolorDarkGray #808080
kolorRed #d75f87
kolorGreen #87d787
kolorYellow #d7d787
kolorBlue #87afff
kolorMagenta #d787d7
kolorCyan #5fd7ff
kolorOrange #d7af87
kolorViolet #af87ff
kolorBrown #af8787
kolorLightGray #c6c6c6
kolorWhite #e4e4e4
Use them to get a closer match with vim... see the theme file for the other colors, or use new ones to avoid contrast problems.
Happy experimenting! Feel free to post here.
By the way, the non-text background has been removed now.
]]>WonderWoofy wrote:@firecat53, if you want to change it, the text area is the "Normal ctermbg=" setting and the non-text are is (aptly named) "NonText ctermbg=". They are lines 115 and 117 in zeis's config.
Does it mean you like it? Or do you agree to remove it?
I removed it because I use a dark background with pseudo transparency with urxvt. It is not black but certainly close, and it still looks great.
@firecat53, I think that the .Xresources file does not really matter because the config is specifying the exact one of 256 available colors that the terminal offers (I am not sure about this). But if you use gvim it certainly should not matter because it sepcifies the exact hex color. Also, i do not use the defferent colors for Normal and NonText because there are the tildas to mark where the lines stop, and this is enough for me personally.
Edit: If you use zsh, you can use this to see all the colors:
% for code in {000..255}; do print -P -- "$code: %F{$code}%f"; done