diff options
author | Hugues Hiegel <hugues@hiegel.fr> | 2009-05-14 14:33:08 +0200 |
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committer | Hugues Hiegel <hugues@hiegel.fr> | 2009-05-14 14:33:08 +0200 |
commit | 3140ebd0f5f6110ec8ba2b271be8595393b59aca (patch) | |
tree | d0c73c31245a51b18b93899ccabf6858907e92d5 /11_Colors.zsh | |
parent | 80f100583ebe1a4a2856dcac593e7e1ed63260c9 (diff) |
[Colors] simplification of PS1_USER colors, and moved them into Environment
Diffstat (limited to '11_Colors.zsh')
-rw-r--r-- | 11_Colors.zsh | 20 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 20 deletions
diff --git a/11_Colors.zsh b/11_Colors.zsh index 43c488b..63c20e2 100644 --- a/11_Colors.zsh +++ b/11_Colors.zsh @@ -9,26 +9,6 @@ ## typeset -A prompt_colors git_colors mail_colors correct_colors battery_colors date_colors agent_colors -# I hate kik00l0l colorized prompts, so I'm using a way to -# give a dominant color for each part of the prompt, each of -# these remain still configurable one by one. -# Take a look to set_prompt_colors for these colorizations. -# -# To set the dominant color I'm using this : -# -# - PS1_ROOT when we are root -# - PS1_USER for normal usage -# - PS1_USER_SSH when we are connected through SSH -# -# I'm storing the resulting dominant color in $prompt_colors[generic] - -PS1_ROOT=${PS1_ROOT:-$color[red]} -PS1_USER=${PS1_USER:-$color[blue]} -PS1_SUDO=${PS1_SUDO:-$color[green]} -PS1_USER_SSH=${PS1_USER_SSH:-$color[magenta]} -#PS1_USER_SCR=${PS1_USER_SCR:-$color[cyan]} -PS1_USER_SCR=$PS1_USER - correct_colors[error]="$color[red];$color[bold]" correct_colors[suggest]="$color[blue];$color[bold]" |