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Solarized vim theme Ethan Schoonover <es@ethanschoonover.com> Download the latest release and see screenshots/details on use: http://ethanschoonover.com/solarized --------------------------------------------------------------------- QUICKSTART: --------------------------------------------------------------------- Put the following two lines in your vimrc: set background=dark colorscheme solarized or, for the light background mode of Solarized: set background=light colorscheme solarized Other options are detailed below. IMPORTANT NOTE FOR TERMINAL USERS: If you are running vim in a terminal, Solarized will run in 256 color mode if the terminal supports it, but those 256 colors are (in all 256 color terminal emulators) limited to a "degraded" color palette. While the colors will all approximate the specific Solarized color values, if you prefer an accurate color palette you can set the ANSI colors in your terminal and use the 16 color terminal mode using the g:solarized_termcolors="16" option detailed below. The ANSI color map is specified in the table below and terminal color themes are available for download from the web page listed at the top of this file, including xorg defaul color values and themes for OS X Terminal.app and iTerm 2. --------------------------------------------------------------------- LICENSE --------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------- ABOUT --------------------------------------------------------------------- SOLARIZED is a precisely designed color scheme with unique characteristics: PRECISION: Solarized is comprised of eight base monotone colors complemented by eight accent colors. The monotone colors are specified in L*a*b* colorspace for perceptually uniform contrast, even when the palette is inverted from dark to light background mode. Accent colors are selected based on specific color-wheel relationships to the base monotone series (complement, triad, tetrad, split-complement, etc). INVERSION: Solarized can easily switch from light to dark background mode and yet maintains L* (lightness) relationships in the entire base monotone palette set. Accent colors retain excellent readability on both light and dark backgrounds. Thus the vim solarized colorscheme, for example, can be easily modified and extended without any effort spent on maintaining the light/dark modes separately; the mode switch is the simple inversion of four color values. READABILITY: Solarized has been designed as a "selective contrast" colorscheme (versus the more common high or low contrast schemes). Elements which are secondary in importance, or which should minimize their visual intrusiveness (e.g. line numbers and comments in vim) use the lower contrast base color values, while high value content (e.g. code) uses higher contrast base values as well as accent colors. SCALABILITY: Solarized has been designed to be used both in the full palette mode (in text editors where many colors are useful for syntax highlighting) as well as in a scaled down five color mode for graphic design purposes (web pages). PERSONALITY: Solarized aims to be flexible in many contexts and as such it maintains the common primary and secondary named colors (red, blue, yellow, green, etc.). Despite the common nature of these hues, each color has been carefully tuned in terms of saturation, luminosity (more accurately, L* lightness) so that the entire palette has a rich, warm feel in the accent range as evidenced by the ochre yellow and oxygenated blood red, complementing the deep-sea blue-greens of the base monotone colors. On the name: "Solarized" refers to the dual light/dark mode of the palette, somewhat analogous to the photographic effect of solarization. The Ian Brown album "Solarized" is also on regular rotation in my playlist. --------------------------------------------------------------------- COLOR VALUES --------------------------------------------------------------------- Download palettes and files from: http://ethanschoonover.com/solarized Solarized HEX 16/8 TERMCOL XTERM/HEX L*A*B RGB HSB base03 #00141b 8/4 brblack 233 #121212 05 -06 -07 0 20 27 194 100 10 base02 #13242a 0/4 black 234 #1c1c1c 13 -06 -06 19 36 42 194 54 16 base01 #3f4e53 10/7 brgreen 237 #3a3a3a 32 -05 -05 63 78 83 195 24 33 base00 #5e6d73 11/7 bryellow 240 #585858 45 -05 -05 94 109 115 197 18 45 base0 #77878c 12/6 brblue 242 #6c6c6c 55 -05 -05 119 135 140 194 15 55 base1 #9ba9a7 14/4 brcyan 246 #949494 68 -05 -01 155 169 167 174 8 66 base2 #d8dbd4 7/7 white 252 #d0d0d0 87 -02 03 216 219 212 87 3 86 base3 #f7f0dd 15/7 brwhite 230 #ffffd7 95 00 10 247 240 221 44 11 97 yellow #b58900 3/3 yellow 136 #af8700 60 10 65 181 137 0 45 100 71 orange #bb3e07 9/3 brred 130 #af5f00 45 50 55 187 62 7 18 96 73 red #bd000f 1/1 red 124 #af0000 40 65 50 189 0 15 355 100 74 magenta #c42376 5/5 magenta 125 #af005f 45 65 -05 196 35 118 329 82 77 violet #6c71c4 13/5 brmagenta 61 #5f5faf 50 15 -45 108 113 196 237 45 77 blue #007fc4 4/4 blue 32 #0087d7 50 -10 -45 0 127 196 201 100 77 cyan #2aa198 6/6 cyan 37 #00afaf 60 -35 -05 42 161 152 175 74 63 green #859900 2/2 green 64 #5f8700 60 -20 65 133 153 0 68 100 60 --------------------------------------------------------------------- OPTIONS --------------------------------------------------------------------- Set these in your vimrc file prior to calling the colorscheme. option name default optional ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_style = "dark" | "light" ------------------------------------------------ If "solarized_style" isn't set, Solarized will use the value set by "background" in your vimrc. I recommend using "background" for simplicity. Thus in your vimrc file, the following sequences would set Solarized to either dark or light mode, respectively: set background=dark colorscheme solarized set background=light colorscheme solarized The above is equivalent to: let g:solarized_style = "dark" colorscheme solarized let g:solarized_style = "light" colorscheme solarized Note that, if set, g:solarized_style overrides the setting for "background". ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_contrast = "normal"| "high" ------------------------------------------------ Solarized has been designed to keep contrast of less critical elements low (e.g. comments are lower contrast). Solarized has also been tested on devices with a wide variety of gamma values and should perform well on most displays. If you find you want to increase contrast for the low contrast items (comments, etc.) you can set this value to "high" (default is "normal"). I encourage you to use it in normal mode first. ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_termtrans = 0 | 1 ------------------------------------------------ On some terminals (urxvt in my tests) Vim colorthemes may override transparency settings of the terminal. Setting this to "1" changes the background value in terminal Vim mode to "NONE" allowing your terminal background color/transparency to be used for Vim's background. This shouldn't be necessary in OSX terminal applications such as Terminal and iTerm2. ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_termcolors= 16 | 256 ------------------------------------------------ A very important setting if you are using Vim in terminals and want accurate colors. There are two options: 16 - Use the named 16 colors of the terminal (red, blue, etc.). In order for the colors to be accurately reproduced for this colorscheme, you must set your terminal's 16 colors to match Solarized. I list the terminal color values in a table above, and also provide downloads of colorscheme for command terminal applications from http://ejas.net/solarized ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_degrade = 0 | 1 ------------------------------------------------ Used primarily during testing, this can be set to 1 to force Solarized to degrade the hex color values to xterm/256 color approximate matching values. Note that while in terminal mode in a 256 color terminal, these degraded color values will be used automatically unless you have adjusted your terminal's default 16 colors and set g:solarized_termcolors to 16 in your vimrc before setting your colorscheme. ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_bold = 1 | 0 ------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_underline = 1 | 0 ------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------ g:solarized_italic = 0 | 1 ------------------------------------------------