GoldenredDragon
Registered
Hello,
I tried googling, and the search function for this forum after finding it, but I can't seem to find what I'm looking for.
I got thousands (ok, maybe only a couple tens) of topics about how to change the background color of the terminal, and separately, how to change the text color in the terminal. Those feats I've already managed to achieve. Now I'm looking for something new :
Is it possible to have text have it's own background ? Something like all text being "overlined". In a sense, each character would be it's own personal color (anywhere from white to red, going through yellow and blue, but no darks, nor any blacks) and the background of all characters would be black. And the tricky part, the terminal window itself would be fully transparent.
So in a sense, only when there is text written is there a background.
Now that I hope I've made myself understood... is there a way to achieve this ?
By the way, I'm using mostly a bash shell, so if it is possible through a .bashrc file, or .bashcolors something, then do tell !
To summarize :
"text background" => black
"text color" => whatever (white, color palette from vim, lscolors, ...)
"background color" => transparent
G.R.D. (Hope it was clear)
I tried googling, and the search function for this forum after finding it, but I can't seem to find what I'm looking for.
I got thousands (ok, maybe only a couple tens) of topics about how to change the background color of the terminal, and separately, how to change the text color in the terminal. Those feats I've already managed to achieve. Now I'm looking for something new :
Is it possible to have text have it's own background ? Something like all text being "overlined". In a sense, each character would be it's own personal color (anywhere from white to red, going through yellow and blue, but no darks, nor any blacks) and the background of all characters would be black. And the tricky part, the terminal window itself would be fully transparent.
So in a sense, only when there is text written is there a background.
Now that I hope I've made myself understood... is there a way to achieve this ?
By the way, I'm using mostly a bash shell, so if it is possible through a .bashrc file, or .bashcolors something, then do tell !
To summarize :
"text background" => black
"text color" => whatever (white, color palette from vim, lscolors, ...)
"background color" => transparent
G.R.D. (Hope it was clear)