![]() I design this light color scheme for terminal Vim and gVim, and I call it Paper Color. It is inspired by Google’s Material Design. So, I decided to create my own color scheme.Īssembly: MIPS, GAS, NASM | Plus xxd generated hexdump for fun □ Or, some work on these languages but not on the others, so I had to switch theme based on the language I was programming, and it quickly became annoying. In the beginning, I was happy with the themes I found, but as soon as I worked with less mainstream languages, most of the themes don’t work well enough. Coming from Windows background, I realized how much I missed out. I was surprised by how useful and colorful the terminal could be. I started using Linux and Vim last Summer, and one of the first things I did in Vim, as I would do in any code editor, was to find a decent color scheme. PaperColor currently gets 1500+ downloads every 2 weeks.Īfter years of improvements since the last release, I think it’s time for PaperColor to reach an official 1.0 release.īelow is the story behind PaperColor copied from the original post. This was before Visual Studio Code/Atom era, and yet, there are even more Vim users now as I see the number of downloads grow higher every day. This is an import from my own blog post in 2015 when I open-sourced my Vim color scheme that had received a warm welcome from many Vim users and inspired others to port to different platforms and create different UI projects.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |