Mercurial > vim
view vimtutor.bat @ 34232:47385c831d92 v9.1.0061
patch 9.1.0061: UX of visual highlighting can be improved
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/e6d8b4662ddf9356da53f56e363b67b524fd8825
Author: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Date: Sun Jan 28 23:33:29 2024 +0100
patch 9.1.0061: UX of visual highlighting can be improved
Problem: UX of visual highlighting can be improved
Solution: Improve readibility of visual highlighting,
by setting better foreground and background
colors
The default visual highlighting currently is nice in that it overlays
the actual syntax highlighting by using a separate distinct background
color.
However, this can cause hard to read text, because the contrast
between the actual syntax element and the background color is way too
low. That is an issue, that has been bothering colorschemes authors for
quite some time so much, that they are defining the Visual highlighting
group to use a separate foreground and background color, so that the
syntax highlighting vanishes, but the text remains readable (ref:
vim/colorschemes#250)
So this is an attempt to perform the same fix for the default Visual
highlighting and just use a default foreground and background color
instead of using reverse.
I also removed the hard-coded changes to the Visual highlighting in
init_highlight. It's not quite clear to me, why those were there and not
added directly to the highlighting_init_<dark|light> struct.
closes: #13663
related: vim/colorschemes#250
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 28 Jan 2024 23:39:23 +0100 |
parents | 79aaaa134298 |
children |
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:: Start Vim on a copy of the tutor file. @echo off :: Usage: vimtutor [-console] [xx] :: :: -console means gvim will not be used :: xx is a language code like "es" or "nl". :: When an xx argument is given, it tries loading that tutor. :: When this fails or no xx argument was given, it tries using 'v:lang' :: When that also fails, it uses the English version. :: Use Vim to copy the tutor, it knows the value of $VIMRUNTIME FOR %%d in (. %TMP% %TEMP%) DO ( call :test_dir_writable "%~dpf0" %%d IF NOT ERRORLEVEL 1 GOTO dir_ok ) echo No working directory is found GOTO end :test_dir_writable SET TUTORCOPY=%2\$tutor$ COPY %1 %TUTORCOPY% >nul 2>nul GOTO end :dir_ok SET xx=%1 IF NOT .%1==.-console GOTO use_gui SHIFT SET xx=%1 GOTO use_vim :use_gui :: Try making a copy of tutor with gvim. If gvim cannot be found, try using :: vim instead. If vim cannot be found, alert user to check environment and :: installation. :: The script tutor.vim tells Vim which file to copy. start "dummy" /b /w "%~dp0gvim.exe" -u NONE -c "so $VIMRUNTIME/tutor/tutor.vim" IF ERRORLEVEL 1 GOTO use_vim :: Start gvim without any .vimrc, set 'nocompatible' start "dummy" /b /w "%~dp0gvim.exe" -u NONE -c "set nocp" %TUTORCOPY% GOTO end :use_vim :: The script tutor.vim tells Vim which file to copy call vim -u NONE -c "so $VIMRUNTIME/tutor/tutor.vim" IF ERRORLEVEL 1 GOTO no_executable :: Start vim without any .vimrc, set 'nocompatible' call vim -u NONE -c "set nocp" %TUTORCOPY% GOTO end :no_executable ECHO. ECHO. ECHO No vim or gvim found in current directory or PATH. ECHO Check your installation or re-run install.exe :end :: remove the copy of the tutor IF EXIST %TUTORCOPY% DEL %TUTORCOPY% SET xx=