Ryan Beesley

Results 56 comments of Ryan Beesley

There are several things moving right now which complicate things. PowerShell has been changing the way it references terminal colors and the console team has been changing things as well....

@timblaktu, still this way? Can you provide more details like what version of Windows you're running and the steps you took to get into this state? I'd also be curious...

What platform are you running this against?

There's a lot changing with respect to how the Windows 10 console works. I think if you are using Windows 10, the colortool is probably the right approach. With the...

PowerShell on Windows 10 machines should be using PSReadline, so this would be why the command history is intact. CMD itself doesn't have command history and I believe this is...

If we take the change with #19, it should resolve this. The shortcut link is what dictates the color scheme and the change provides a way to easily apply different...

@StephaneKazmierczak, you will still probably want to apply the Solarized .dir_colors to match. Right now I'm using [dircolors.256dark](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/seebi/dircolors-solarized/master/dircolors.256dark) from [seebi/dircolors-solarized](https://github.com/seebi/dircolors-solarized). Clone the dircolors-solarized project then link `~/.dir_colors` to the appropriate...

No, I can't think of anything. Do you see 256 colors when you run [this script](http://misc.flogisoft.com/bash/tip_colors_and_formatting#colors2)?

I looked at both my repository fork and neilpa's repository and all the .reg files in both repositories are UTF-8 w/o BOM. To be honest, the registry files are somewhat...

Read what Rich Turner had to say on the [Window Command Line Tools For Developers Blog](https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/commandline): [Understanding Windows Console Host Settings](https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/2017/06/20/understanding-windows-console-host-settings/). It isn't so straight forward. Most of the time...