@@JasonJurotich I did that with Yabai, which is my window manager. I have a video on how I set everything up, one of my first videos and not the best quality, but the content is still relevant th-cam.com/video/IRL-ueXXnWM/w-d-xo.html
I’ll definitely steal some of those colors for my color schemes! Awesome video! How might you generate config files that don’t overwrite user config options? For example, if I have keyboard shortcuts already in kitty.conf, but don’t want to modify the select-colorscheme script every time I modify the config file?
@@linkarzu I’m just thinking about how to modify the switch color scheme script to modify the conf files by something such as appending them to overwrite previous color schemes but keeping existing settings intact. Append does quite work though I think because one it would grow large after switching a bunch and two you want to remove any old/previous color setting while keeping the original conf file
@@prestonhager6444 That's why in the colorscheme dir I have 2 directories, 1 that is "list" in which I keep my themes and those never change unless I update them, and the "active" folder which has the file that is always overwritten, but this is just a temp file. Inside the "kitty" dir I have a temp file that is always overwritten "active-theme.conf" but the original kitty themes in the "themes" dir are never touched. Does that help?
Those are Neovim highlight groups. Do :h highlight-groups to see a list of them + what they currently look like on your colourscheme. You can look up how to override them. I believe the borders used by nvim-cmp is the highlight group 'PMenu' (meaning popup menu). For Neotree/whatever file tree plugin you're using, you'll have to consult their documentation but often there will be a section for highlight groups. If not, you can take a peak at the code, normally they are in a separate module.
You're putting out great content about the terminal, I've watched 5 in a row and still have 15 on my watch later playlist haha, keep it up!
Appreciate your comment and I'm glad the videos are being useful to some people. Stay tuned because they will keep coming
how did you get the background in github to be transparent or with an image?
@@JasonJurotich I did that with Yabai, which is my window manager. I have a video on how I set everything up, one of my first videos and not the best quality, but the content is still relevant
th-cam.com/video/IRL-ueXXnWM/w-d-xo.html
nonstop hits with these back-to-back videos
@@Keb_Le it's been 1 per day for the last 5 days. We'll see how it continues!
@@linkarzu Each video has been great! Insane output. hope you keep it up 😁💪
🙂👍
I’ll definitely steal some of those colors for my color schemes! Awesome video! How might you generate config files that don’t overwrite user config options? For example, if I have keyboard shortcuts already in kitty.conf, but don’t want to modify the select-colorscheme script every time I modify the config file?
Sorry, I got a little lost there, would you mind elaborating more on the kitty.conf file? I'll try to suggest something
@@linkarzu I’m just thinking about how to modify the switch color scheme script to modify the conf files by something such as appending them to overwrite previous color schemes but keeping existing settings intact. Append does quite work though I think because one it would grow large after switching a bunch and two you want to remove any old/previous color setting while keeping the original conf file
@@prestonhager6444 That's why in the colorscheme dir I have 2 directories, 1 that is "list" in which I keep my themes and those never change unless I update them, and the "active" folder which has the file that is always overwritten, but this is just a temp file.
Inside the "kitty" dir I have a temp file that is always overwritten "active-theme.conf" but the original kitty themes in the "themes" dir are never touched.
Does that help?
How do you get borders for things like autocomplete and the tree? mine dont have borders for some reason😭
@@makesushi can you please tell me what minute and second you're talking bout in the video
Those are Neovim highlight groups. Do :h highlight-groups to see a list of them + what they currently look like on your colourscheme. You can look up how to override them. I believe the borders used by nvim-cmp is the highlight group 'PMenu' (meaning popup menu). For Neotree/whatever file tree plugin you're using, you'll have to consult their documentation but often there will be a section for highlight groups. If not, you can take a peak at the code, normally they are in a separate module.
@@pwbandwidth oh yeah after a bit of investigation i got it! my nvim setup looks cutee asf now
😍
Man, I'm speechless; this is insane!
Glad you find it useful!