Here are a few utilities for dealing with terminal colors. I started writing them because I was bored on a plane flight. I wanted a way to easily design color palettes and since I didn't have access to the internet, I couldn't get to the 4bit designer, which is also a great tool.
extract-colors.py
reads colors data from an SVG file and produces lines for
your ~/.Xdefaults or Linux terminal color configuration escape codes.
It's not very smart... It doesn't use proper XML parsing at all, just some
regular expressions that are fairly robust. See the provided example.svg
file for a base to work from.
To generate lines for your ~/.Xdefaults
, try:
$ extract-colors.py -t xdefaults example.svg
This will output the appropriate lines.
If you use TTYs directly and would like to generate escape codes for configuring the color palette there, try:
$ extract-colors.py -t linuxterm example.svg
You can then throw those anywhere you want, e.g. in your
~/.{bash,zsh,whatever}rc
. I recommend something like this:
if [ "$TERM" = "linux" ]; then
# borrowed from http://code.google.com/p/fbterm/
# output of extract-colors.py here
clear # for background artifacting
fi
show-colors.py
is yet another utility to display your available palette.
It's pretty self explanatory. Just run it.