buku allows you to customize the color scheme via a five-letter string, reminiscent of BSD LSCOLORS. The five letters represent the colors of
index
title
url
description/comment/note
tag
respectively. The five-letter string is passed in either as the argument to the --colors option, or as the value of the environment variable BUKU_COLORS.
We offer the following colors/styles:
Letter |
Color/Style |
|---|---|
a |
black |
b |
red |
c |
green |
d |
yellow |
e |
blue |
f |
magenta |
g |
cyan |
h |
white |
i |
bright black |
j |
bright red |
k |
bright green |
l |
bright yellow |
m |
bright blue |
n |
bright magenta |
o |
bright cyan |
p |
bright white |
A-H |
bold version of the lowercase-letter color |
I-P |
bold version of the lowercase-letter bright color |
x |
normal |
X |
bold |
y |
reverse video |
Y |
bold reverse video |
The default colors string is oKlxm, which stands for
bright cyan index
bold bright green title
bright yellow url
normal description
bright blue tag
Note that
Bright colors (implemented as
\x1b[90m–\x1b[97m) may not be available in all color-capable terminal emulators;Some terminal emulators draw bold text in bright colors instead;
Some terminal emulators only distinguish between bold and bright colors via a default-off switch.
Please consult the manual of your terminal emulator as well as the Wikipedia article on ANSI escape sequences.
Windows support
By default colors are disabled on Windows because cmd doesn’t understand POSIX color sequences. However,
option
--colorsenables colorsenvironment variable
BUKU_COLORS, if set, enables colorsbukucan detect ConEmu and show color codes