4bit Terminal Color Scheme Designer
- Go to http://ciembor.github.com/4bit.
- Design your terminal look.
- Click
Get Scheme
button and select the format of configuration file.
-
ATerm, Urxvt, Rxvt, XTerm and other libXt terminals: Copy the generated text to
~/.Xresources
file (you may have to create it) and runxrdb ~/.Xresources
. -
Gnome Terminal, Guake: Save the generated script into set_colors.sh, make this file executable
$ chmod +x set_colors.sh
and run it$ ./set_colors.sh
. Alternatively copy generated lines directly into your shell. -
XFCE4 Terminal: Backup
~/.config/Terminal/terminalrc
file and replace it with generated text. Take into account that this file contains all XFCE4 Terminal settings, not only color scheme. -
Konsole and Yakuake: Put the generated file to
~/.kde/share/apps/konsole/NAME-OF-SCHEME.colorscheme
and restart the terminal. -
iTerm2 for Mac: Create a file
~/NAME-OF-SCHEME.itermcolors
with the generated xml content and load it with theLoad Presets ...
button underiTerm2 / Preferences / Profiles / <Your Profile> / Colors
. -
Putty: Save the generated file with
.reg
extension and double click it. -
Terminator: Copy lines within the [profiles] section of the generated configuration file to ~/.config/terminator/config file.
-
Termite: Copy lines within the [colors] section of the generated configuration file into your
~/.config/termite/config
file. -
Other terminals: Generate one of the supported formats and copy hex values into the configuration file (or tool) of your terminal.
I pushed to this repository all fonts, images and most of third-party libraries. The only missed JavaScript dependency is Google Closure Library. You will also need some system tools to run the build script:
After git clone
please edit build.sh
and make sure that paths are correct. After that run ./build.sh
. It generates compiled JavaScript, compiled LESS, and merged CSS.
Maciej Ciemborowicz
Stefan Wienert
Victor Hugo Borja