![]() ![]() It's only slightly brighter (0.2, 0.2, 1) vs. So, I hacked Terminal to change its definition of 'blue'. ![]() By changing the dir colours, or other user-accessible preferences, the best you can do is tell all your software to never use the blue colour, leaving you with only 7 colours to pick from. However, the terminal program (in this case 'Terminal') gets to decide what precise shade to use for those colours. You see, there are 8 basic colours command line tools can display: black, white, red, green, blue, cyan, yellow and magenta. ![]() As the author of this hack I have a few words to say in my defense:ġ - I purposely submitted this hack with no step-by-step directions: I hoped to scare away anyone who wasn't very comfortable with hex-editing and/or PowerPC assembly language.Ģ - This hack is *not* the same as changing the dir colours, or modifying the colour map for vim, or wherever else colours are defined. ![]()
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