On 12:04 17 Jan 2002, Carl B. Constantine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: | I solved my color problems with mutt-1.3.25. I did specify the curses | param incorrectly. It's fixed and I'm happily using the new mutt. | | However, I have a different color issue to ask about. Under my new | compile of mutt with ncurses 5.2, I see yellow color as yellow (dtterm). | However, under my Linux system (gnome terminal) yellow looks more | orange/brown in color.
Colours are really just specified as slot numbers (1-8 standard, another 8 in some more recent terminal emulators). So the actual hue you get for a colour slot is a quality of implementation issue. My Linux console shows my yellow prompt as an orange/brown too :-( Rxvt and xterm show yellow. | When I ssh from my solaris 8 box to my home machine, color works | correctly (including yellow). Yes - is passing through the TERM variable, your home machine is using colour for that $TERM value, and your terminal emulator on the Solaris8 box is clearly supporting the colour escape sequences. | However, when I ssh from my home machine | to my work-solaris 8 machine, mutt is in mono color though editing | (using vim) does show up in color, just not mutt's indexes and such. | Anyone seen that before? Yes! Me! For Months! But I fixed it. Lemme see... (Oh, a check - since I missed your other thread - does mutt on your Solaris box do colour when you're sitting in front of it?) What does $TERM say at your ssh-ed prompt? And at your Linux prompt before the ssh? Oh yeah, the fix - on Solaris the xterm terminfo doesn't have colour. For mutt, I set my $TERM to rxvt if it's "xterm" before invoking mutt. That got a colour-capable terminal description. For your amusement you can read my wrapper script here: http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/scripts/stubs/mutt Cheers, -- Cameron Simpson, DoD#743 [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/ Sometimes the only solution is to find a new problem.