Mail Archives: cygwin/2005/10/19/17:21:07
Hi Igor,
> > > > > > ==
> > > > > > I am finding that when I exit from vim, it turns my background
> > > > > > back into black (which is how I had it before I tried changing
> > > > > > it today). Is there a setting or something I have forgotten to
> > > > > > change?
> > > > > > ==
> > > > > > Actually this is happenning not just after vim.. but even after
> > > > > > I exit "less"!
> > > > >
> > > > > Works for me. Did you close the console window and re-open one after
> > > > > changing the colors? Before doing this, the console colors are known
> > > > > to be scrambled as you describe above.
> > > >
> > > > Yes I closed and re-opened the console and the problem recurs. :-/
> > >
> > > vim (and less, since you seem to have the same problem there) use
> > > something called an "alternate screen". This is a feature of the terminal
> > > that allows the program to make arbitrary modifications to the terminal
> > > screen that will be undone when the program switches back to the main
> > > screen. In particular, any color changes will be undone. Consequently,
> > > if you wish to change the color of the main screen, don't do this while
> > > running vim or less.
> > > HTH,
> >
> > I admit to being somewhat confused by your remark - I didn't change the
> > screen while running vim or less. I edited the properties of the console
> > so that it would affect all consoles with the same name, changed the PS1
> > environment variable in my .bash_profile, closed the console, re-opened
> > it, ran vim and/or less, exited vim and/or less and then found the
> > console colors changed. Have I misunderstood your point?
> >
> > Interestingly, I find that I can keep pressing ENTER and 'clear' the
> > screen back to how it was, but this is an ugly solution.
>
> What is the value of your PS1 variable? Does it, perhaps, contain the
> code at the end that resets the background? That was the only way I could
> reproduce the behavior you report on my machine.
My PS1 variable is:
\e[47m\n\s\v User \u on host \h in dir \w\n\d \@>\e[0;30m
bash2.05b User rbram on host cml035835 in dir /cygdrive/c/eTech/eForms2
Thu Oct 20 07:16 AM> echo $PS1
\e[47m\n\s\v User \u on host \h in dir \w\n\d \@>\e[0;30m
Rob
:)
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