I'm running Xubuntu 13.04 and I want to use Vim as my default editor for everything. I have downloaded many vim color schemas and tried them out, but all of them don't look like the official screenshot.
For example, vim's own color schema – desert should look like this:
But in my vim, many colors won't display, for example the background.
So this means a fighting with xfce's Terminal and I can't force it to use 256 colors.
the command tput colors gives me
8.
At the same time the code for ((x=0; x<=255; x++));do echo -e "${x}:\033[48;5;${x}mcolor\033[000m";done shows me nice colors. it seems i missed something. If I run
**$ echo $TERM**
I get xterm. It should be 'xterm-256color'
When I try
set term=xterm-256color
and
export TERM=xterm-256color
Then: echo $TERM
I get the message
xterm-256color.
But after signout/signup, I'm still not getting the right colors in Vim. And I see the Xterm is changed to xterm again.
I added:
if $TERM == "xterm-256color" set t_Co=256 endif
and
t_Co=256
to my .vimrc file and it didn't seem to help. Then I customized the xterm entries; added this to ~/.Xdefaults:
*customization: -color
XTerm*termName: xterm-256color
Add this to ~/.xsession to apply to new terminals:
if [ -f $HOME/.Xdefaults ]; then
xrdb -merge $HOME/.Xdefaults
fi
When I changed in preferences of terminal, emulate terminal environment, the 'xterm' to 'xterm-256color'
I get the message:
'*** VTE ***: Failed to load terminal capabilities from '/etc/termcap'
When I check /usr/share/vte/termcap/xterm, the file xterm-256color is missing. Same in folder xterm0.0. I tried to find this file on internet to download and put in the folder, but I couldn't find it.
This is driving me crazy the whole day… Have anyone suggestions?
Best Answer
Quick (Temporary) Way
Enter this whenever you open a new terminal:
Works for as long as the window is open.
Works-but-dirty Way
Append the line above to
~/.bashrc
.The problem with that, though, is that editing
$TERM
in.bashrc
is a bad idea because doing that automatically makes any terminal usingbash
try to use it regardless of whether it actually supports 256 colors or not (like when SSH-ing or accessing the terminals with Ctrl+Alt+F1 to F6).What I did, though is that since
xfce4-terminal
sets the$COLORTERM
value toxfce4-terminal
, I, instead appended the following to.bashrc
:That way, the relevant
$TERM
edit only happens if you're usingxfce4-terminal
, which just sets it toxterm
anyway (and changing the emulation environment results in that "VTE" message).References: