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Custom color schemes
Justin Hileman edited this page Apr 14, 2018
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6 revisions
To use a custom color scheme, create a function called bobthefish_colors
:
function bobthefish_colors -S -d 'Define a custom bobthefish color scheme'
# Optionally include a base color scheme
__bobthefish_colors default
# Then override everything you want!
# Note that these must be defined with `set -x`
set -x color_initial_segment_exit white red --bold
set -x color_initial_segment_su white green --bold
set -x color_initial_segment_jobs white blue --bold
set -x color_path black white
set -x color_path_basename black white --bold
set -x color_path_nowrite magenta black
set -x color_path_nowrite_basename magenta black --bold
set -x color_repo green black
set -x color_repo_work_tree black black --bold
set -x color_repo_dirty brred black
set -x color_repo_staged yellow black
set -x color_vi_mode_default brblue black --bold
set -x color_vi_mode_insert brgreen black --bold
set -x color_vi_mode_visual bryellow black --bold
set -x color_vagrant brcyan black
set -x color_k8s magenta white --bold
set -x color_username white black --bold
set -x color_hostname white black
set -x color_rvm brmagenta black --bold
set -x color_virtualfish brblue black --bold
set -x color_virtualgo brblue black --bold
set -x color_desk brblue black --bold
end
Copy and paste that into a file called bobthefish_colors.fish
in your $fish_function_path
(probably ~/.config/fish/functions/bobthefish_colors.fish
) and replace the color variables with the colors you want.
If you want to use a base color scheme and just tweak a few things, you can change the __bobthefish_colors default
line to reference any of the built-in color schemes. Then you can comment out or delete the lines for colors you don't want to override.
To test the output while creating your color scheme, you can run bobthefish_display_colors
. To see the built-in color schemes, run bobthefish_display_colors --all
:)