vivid is a generator for the LS_COLORS
environment variable that controls the colorized output of
ls
, tree
,
fd
, etc.
It uses a YAML-based configuration format for the filetype-database
and the color themes. In contrast to
dircolors
,
the database and the themes are organized in different files. This allows users to
choose and customize color themes independent from the collection of file extensions.
Instead of using (cryptic) ANSI escape codes, colors can be specified in the RRGGBB
format and will be translated to either truecolor (24-bit) ANSI codes or 8-bit codes
for older terminal emulators.
| snazzy
| molokai
| ayu
|
| --- | --- | --- |
| |
|
|
Choose a color theme (for example: molokai
). Then, add this to your shells RC file
(~/.bashrc
, ~/.zshrc
, …):
bash
export LS_COLORS="$(vivid generate molokai)"
By default, vivid
runs in true color mode (24-bit). If you don't use a terminal
that supports 24-bit colors, use the --color-mode 8-bit
option when running vivid
(vivid -m 8-bit generate molokai
). This will use interpolated 8-bit
colors.
Download one of the Debian packages from the release page
and install it via dpkg -i
:
bash
wget "https://github.com/sharkdp/vivid/releases/download/v0.6.0/vivid_0.6.0_amd64.deb"
sudo dpkg -i vivid_0.6.0_amd64.deb
You can install vivid
from the official package repository:
bash
pacman -S vivid
Check out the release page for binary builds.
If you have Rust 1.31 or higher, you can install vivid
from source via cargo
:
cargo install vivid
Copy the contents of the share/vivid
folder in this repository to
/usr/share/vivid
, $HOME/.config/vivid
, or $XDG_CONFIG_PATH/vivid
on POSIX systems, or to %APPDATA%\vivid
on Windows systems.
You can then start to modify these files or add new themes.
Licensed under either of
at your option.
File types: - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listoffile_formats - https://fileinfo.com/
ANSI colors: - https://jonasjacek.github.io/colors/
LS_COLORS
themes: