Let's talk terminal color schemes. What do you use? What do you look for in a color scheme?
I'm looking for something with somewhat muted colors myself, but something that wouldn't hinder my functionality by having the colors being too similar to each other etc.
Solarized dark
/thread
Tango.
Anything else is for children who only type "ls -l" and "screenfetch" into their terminal emulators to post it in desktop threads.
Altering the terminal output seems degenerate to me. Why not just use programs that output in color?
whatever the Mint default is, except I changed the bg from black to a dark gray
I don't have any strong preferences but I wonder how people can work with a full white background. Don't you just automatically get eye cancer after a while?
>>59109885
This.
https://github.com/arcticicestudio/nord
>>59109885
you turn the brightness down, retard.
Default xterm colorscheme, reversed.
I don't post in desktop threads and "show your screenfetch" threads so I fail to see why would I need a low-contrast pastel-garbage color palette.
>>59109885
More lights gets to your retina therefore your eye focuses better.
People with astigmatism benefit from using dark text on bright background
To be honest the only reason why I'm using reversed color scheme is the fact that most TUI applications were made with it in mind. Plus I can see blue on black far better than the yellow on white.
>>59109514
>He uses a children's palette with dough colors
>>59109498
gross
>>59109466
make your own
So this isn't a desktop thread?
mine
Is there any scientific consensus?
>>59113662
scientific consensus suggests white background with black foreground, or something with slightly less contrast for daily use.
My own. I'll admit to getting pretty autistic with it. I don't like colour schemes which highlight absolutely every single element of syntax though. Keep it to 3/4 colours for syntax highlighting.
>>59113695
Thanks
>>59113634
That's just solarized, isn't it?
>>59113771
Yes
Monokai Dark