From fead075335c4a799a057d311b39c9969fb0be2be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matt Singleton Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2011 12:35:32 -0500 Subject: updating solarized --- vim/doc/solarized.txt | 254 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 254 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vim/doc/solarized.txt (limited to 'vim/doc') diff --git a/vim/doc/solarized.txt b/vim/doc/solarized.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..93ebd68 --- /dev/null +++ b/vim/doc/solarized.txt @@ -0,0 +1,254 @@ +*solarized.vim* for Vim version 7.3 or newer. Modified: 2011 May 05 + + + Solarized Vim Colorscheme by Ethan Schoonover ~ + +Solarized Colorscheme *solarized* + *solarized-help* + *solarized-colors* + *solarized-colorscheme* + *vim-colors-solarized* + +Solarized is a carefully designed selective contrast colorscheme with dual +light and dark modes that runs in both GUI, 256 and 16 color modes. + +See the homepage at http://ethanschoonover.com/solarized for screenshots and +details. + +0. Install |solarized-install| +1. Solarized Menu |solarized-menu| +2. Options |solarized-options| +3. Toggle Background |solarized-togglebg| +4. Terminal Issues |solarized-term| + +============================================================================== +0. Install *solarized-install* + +Note: I recommend using Tim Pope's pathogen plugin to install this +colorscheme. See https://github.com/tpope/vim-pathogen . If you've installed +pathogen properly you can install Solarized with the following commands, +followed by the .vimrc configuration below. + + $ cd ~/.vim/bundle + $ git clone https://github.com/altercation/vim-colors-solarized.git + +If you aren't using pathogen, you can use the following three steps to install +Solarized: + +1. Download the solarized distribution (available on the homepage above) + and unarchive the file. + +2. Move `solarized.vim` to your `.vim/colors` directory. + +3. Move each of the files in each subdirectories to the corresponding .vim + subdirectory (e.g. autoload/togglebg.vim goes into your .vim/autoload + directory as .vim/autoload/togglebg.vim). + + +After installation, place the following lines in your .vimrc: + + syntax enable + set background=dark + colorscheme solarized + +or, for the light background mode of Solarized: + + syntax enable + set background=light + colorscheme solarized + +============================================================================== +1. Solarized Menu *solarized-menu* + +Solarized makes available a menu when used in Vim GUI mode (gvim, macvim). +This menu includes many of the options detailed below so that you can test out +different values quickly without modifying your .vimrc file. If you wish to +turn off this menu permanently, simply place the following line in your .vimrc +above the "colorscheme solarized" line. + + let g:solarized_menu=0 + +============================================================================== +2. Toggle Background *solarized-togglebg* + *toggle-bg* *togglebg* + *toggle-background* + +Solarized comes with Toggle Background, a simple plugin to switch between +light and dark background modes and reset the colorscheme. This is most useful +for colorschemes that support both light and dark modes and in terminals or +gui vim windows where the background will be properly set. + +Toggle Background can be accessed by: + + * the Solarized menu (in Vim gui mode) + * the Window menu (in Vim gui mode, even if the Solarized menu is off) + * the "yin/yang" toolbar button (in Vim gui mode) + * the default mapping of + * custom key mapping you set in your .vimrc (see below) + * command line via ":ToggleBG" (no quotes) + +Toggle Background starts with a default mapping to function key . If you +are already using this in a mapping, Toggle Background will not map itself to +a default and you will have to map it manually in your .vimrc file, or +remove/change your existing mapping to another value. To customize the +keyboard mapping in your .vimrc file, use the following line, changing the +"" value to the key or key combination you wish to use: + + call togglebg#map("") + +Note that you'll want to use a single function key or equivalent if you want +the plugin to work in all modes (normal, insert, visual). + +When using the plugin during normal, visual, or insert mode, there should be +no interruption in workflow. However, if you activate the plugin during +REPLACE mode, you will switch to standard insert mode (you will leave the +overwrite replace mode). + +============================================================================== +3. Solarized Terminal Issues *solarized-term* + +If you are going to use Solarized in Terminal mode (i.e. not in a GUI version +like gvim or macvim), **please please please** consider setting your terminal +emulator's colorscheme to used the Solarized palette. I've included palettes +for some popular terminal emulator as well as Xdefaults in the official +Solarized download available from the Solarized homepage listed at the top of +this help document. If you use Solarized *without* these colors, Solarized +will need to be told to degrade its colorscheme to a set compatible with the +limited 256 terminal palette (whereas by using the terminal's 16 ansi color +values, you can set the correct, specific values for the Solarized palette). + +If you do use the custom terminal colors, solarized.vim should work out of +the box for you. If you are using a terminal emulator that supports 256 +colors and don't want to use the custom Solarized terminal colors, you will +need to use the degraded 256 colorscheme. To do so, simply add the following +line *before* the `colorschem solarized` line: + + let g:solarized_termcolors=256 + +Again, I recommend just changing your terminal colors to Solarized values +either manually or via one of the many terminal schemes available for import. + +============================================================================== +4. Solarized Options *solarized-options* + + +AUTOGENERATE OPTIONS + +You can easily modify and experiment with Solarized display options using the +Solarized menu when using Vim in gui mode. Once you have things set to your +liking, you can autogenerate the current option list in a format ready for +insertion into your .vimrc file using the Solarized menu "Autogenerate +Options" command or at the command line with: + + :SolarizedOptions + + +OPTION LIST + +Set these in your vimrc file prior to calling the colorscheme. + +option name default optional +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_termcolors= 16 | 256 +g:solarized_termtrans = 0 | 1 +g:solarized_degrade = 0 | 1 +g:solarized_bold = 1 | 0 +g:solarized_underline = 1 | 0 +g:solarized_italic = 1 | 0 +g:solarized_contrast = "normal"| "high" or "low" +g:solarized_visibility= "normal"| "high" or "low" +g:solarized_hitrail = 0 | 1 +g:solarized_menu = 1 | 0 +------------------------------------------------ + + +OPTION DETAILS + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_termcolors= 256 | 16 *'solarized_termcolors'* +------------------------------------------------ +The most important option if you are using vim in terminal (non gui) mode! +This tells Solarized to use the 256 degraded color mode if running in a 256 +color capable terminal. Otherwise, if set to `16` it will use the terminal +emulators colorscheme (best option as long as you've set the emulators colors +to the Solarized palette). + +If you are going to use Solarized in Terminal mode (i.e. not in a GUI +version like gvim or macvim), **please please please** consider setting your +terminal emulator's colorscheme to used the Solarized palette. I've included +palettes for some popular terminal emulator as well as Xdefaults in the +official Solarized download available from: +http://ethanschoonover.com/solarized . If you use Solarized without these +colors, Solarized will by default use an approximate set of 256 colors. It +isn't bad looking and has been extensively tweaked, but it's still not quite +the real thing. + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_termtrans = 0 | 1 *'solarized_termtrans'* +------------------------------------------------ +If you use a terminal emulator with a transparent background and Solarized +isn't displaying the background color transparently, set this to 1 and +Solarized will use the default (transparent) background of the terminal +emulator. *urxvt* required this in my testing; iTerm2 did not. + +Note that on Mac OS X Terminal.app, solarized_termtrans is set to 1 by +default as this is almost always the best option. The only exception to this +is if the working terminfo file supports 256 colors (xterm-256color). + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_degrade = 0 | 1 *'solarized_degrade'* +------------------------------------------------ +For test purposes only; forces Solarized to use the 256 degraded color mode +to test the approximate color values for accuracy. + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_bold = 1 | 0 *'solarized_bold'* +------------------------------------------------ +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_underline = 1 | 0 *'solarized_underline'* +------------------------------------------------ +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_italic = 1 | 0 *'solarized_italic'* +------------------------------------------------ +If you wish to stop Solarized from displaying bold, underlined or +italicized typefaces, simply assign a zero value to the appropriate +variable, for example: `let g:solarized_italic=0` + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_contrast = "normal"| "high" or "low" *'solarized_contrast'* +------------------------------------------------ +Stick with normal! It's been carefully tested. Setting this option to high +or low does use the same Solarized palette but simply shifts some values up +or down in order to expand or compress the tonal range displayed. + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_visibility = "normal"| "high" or "low" *'solarized_visibility'* +------------------------------------------------ +Special characters such as trailing whitespace, tabs, newlines, when +displayed using ":set list" can be set to one of three levels depending on +your needs. + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_hitrail = 0 | 1 *'solarized_hitrail'* +------------------------------------------------ +Visibility can make listchar entities more visible, but if one has set +cursorline on, these same listchar values standout somewhat less due to the +background color of the cursorline. g:solarized_hitrail enables highlighting +of trailing spaces (only one of the listchar types, but a particularly +important one) while in the cursoline in a different manner in order to make +them more visible. This may not work consistently as Solarized is using +a pattern match than can be overridden by a more encompassing syntax-native +match such as a comment line. + + +------------------------------------------------ +g:solarized_menu = 1 | 0 *'solarized_menu'* +------------------------------------------------ +Solarized includes a menu providing access to several of the above +display related options, including contrast and visibility. This allows +for an easy method of testing different values quickly before settling +on a final assignment for your .vimrc. If you wish to turn off this menu, +assign g:solarized_menu a value of 0. + + + vim:tw=78:noet:ts=8:ft=help:norl: -- cgit v1.2.3