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COLORS.CSH
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1993-04-14
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# Customize the screen colors.
# Copyright (c) 1991 by Hamilton Laboratories. All rights reserved.
# This script shows you how to customize the screen colors used by
# Hamilton C shell and its utilities. You might just use a script like
# this for changing your colors, perhaps calling it from your login.csh
# or you might embed these color settings directly into your login.csh
# or (after rewriting them as SET statements) into your config.sys.
# These are the environmental variables controlling screen colors:
# Name Use Default
# ADDITIONS Lines added found by diff. Bright Green
# COLORS Normal screen colors White on Black
# DELETIONS Lines deleted found by diff. Bright Red
# DIRECTORIES Directories listed by ls. Bright
# DUPLICATES When filename completion matches Green
# more than one name.
# FOREIGNFILES Filetypes that have no counterpart Bright Red
# on OS/2.
# HIGHLIGHT Current disk or directory. Bright
# MATCHFAIL When filename or command completion Bright Red
# doesn't match anything.
# MOREEOF End or Top of File in more. Green
# MOREERROR Unrecognizable command to more. Bright Yellow
# MOREFILLIN User response to more prompt. White
# MOREPROMPT Prompt line in more. Green
# MORETOPMEM Top of Memory message from more. Bright Yellow
# SYSTEMDIRS Directories with the System bit on. Bright Green
# SYSTEMFILES Files with the System bit on. Green
# The colors available in the C shell are black, red, green, yellow, blue,
# magenta (or blue red), cyan (or blue green) and white. Foreground colors
# may also be bright, dim, blink or reverse. The keyword "on" introduces
# background colors. All the names of the colors along with the keywords
# bright, dim, blink, reverse and on may be in upper, lower or mixed case.
# The names of the environmental variables must be all in upper case.
# (Blink causes true blinking only full-screen; in a text window, it
# just makes the background brighter.)
# If a foreground or background color is left unspecified, that plane
# is considered transparent and inherits the color underneath it.
# Here is a sample color scheme that's a little more colorful than the
# normal defaults:
setenv COLORS = white on blue
setenv DELETIONS = bright white on red
setenv ADDITIONS = bright white on green
setenv MOREPROMPT = red on white
setenv MOREFILLIN = black
setenv MOREERROR = bright white on red