Follow-up Comment #1, bug #64720 (project groff): Putting the default color in a system or user file overlooks the fact that a single user can run multiple terminals simultaneously all with different color schemes. Still, not every user will do this, and giving users more control is usually better.
The various colors my system defines for different file types in $LS_COLORS all work on black or white backgrounds, so choosing a default color that works in these two common situations would also be good. But no matter what color is the default, it might still end up matching the background color of the terminal. As I observed about grotty output in bug #64624, "Without a way to query a terminal's color scheme, blindly hard-coding a background color would seem to have limited utility, but users can always change fore- and background colors in tandem." Changing both colors in this situation would be ugly, though. _______________________________________________________ Reply to this item at: <https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?64720> _______________________________________________ Message sent via Savannah https://savannah.gnu.org/