This is my attempt to create an accessible color scheme for the programs I use.
- Place
Aquamarine.colorscheme
in~/.local/share/konsole/
. - In Konsole, click the ☰ menu in the top right corner, Edit Current Profile…, then Appearance on the left, and select Aquamarine.
- In Windows Terminal, click ⌄ on the tab bar, and then click Settings.
- Click Open JSON file in the bottom left corner.
- Copy everything from
WindowsTerminal.json
to the end of the"schemes"
block. Remember that blocks in the JSON file must be separated by commas, like this:
"schemes":
[
{
"name": "previous one"
},
{
"name": "Aquamarine"
}
],
- Then you can set Aquamarine in the file itself (look for
"colorScheme"
), or do it in the GUI for a specific profile or as a default.
Place colors.properties
into ~/.termux/
and execute termux-reload-settings
.
- Place
Aquamarine.json
into~/.config/ghostwriter/themes/
. - In ghostwriter, select the theme from Settings → Themes.
- Warning! The theme doesn’t have a light variant, the dark one is just duplicated as a light one.
Contrast, mostly. I just took base colors (blue, red, purple, etc.) and adjusted them using ColorShark.
I am color blind, but one scheme will not work for everyone. I have adjusted color pairs that give me trouble (yellow/green, cyan/white, etc.), which should work for some people.
This is one of the colors I changed significantly to get away from white and light gray. Otherwise it should be cyan. Then in Nushell, which I use, you type with that color, so it felt as good a name as any.