![]() In other words, every theme does not work on all computers so care should be practiced to make sure that the user gets the best results in this regard. It is also to be noted that the user should make sure that the themes are closely related to the system compatibility which should be kept in mind before the set. It is also to be noted that when it comes to windows 10 then the feedback of the user is something that has made sure that the themes and the features are developed without any issue and problem. I disable it and just use the built-in version.Themes are something that has always made it possible for the user to get the best and the state of the art features installed so that the windows look great and as per the demand of the user. Very similar to the built-in Terminal version except this has transparency and is a little harder to read. I find it even tougher to read though and thus have it disabled. I call this the “GRASS theme, but in blue”. "opacity" : 100, //in old versions use acrylicOpacity from 0.0-1.0 "Courier New 9 semi-light" might be more appropriate My favorite theme, as I find the background color easy on the eyes under every light condition. It’s very readable, though the bright yellow gets tiresome on the eyes after a while. I find this one to be middle-of-the-road in terms of preference. "useAcrylic" : false, //make this true to enable partial transparency (blue text becomes harder to read against white background) Similar fonts in Windows 11 are Consolas, Cascadia Mono, Cascadia Code, Lucida Console Blue text can be a little tough to read against the dark background and could probably stand to be lightened a bit. My least favorite, as green text on a black background isn’t my cup of tea. "fontWeight": "semi-bold", //use normal or semi-light if too bold Font was made bold, as blue text can be hard to read depending on the monitor. Not one I’ll stare at for more than brief periods, and thus I personally disable this one. "fontWeight": "normal", //use semi-light if too bold Similar fonts in Windows 11 are Consolas, Cascadia Code, Lucida Console Apple originally used Menlo Regular 11 and SF Mono Regular 11 For reference, you can see the JSON file I’m currently using (similar to the items below but with changes) at: I suggest starting with 1 theme, and then adding additional ones later. In that space for PART A and PART B, you’ll be pasting the text for whatever theme(s) you want (each theme has a PART A and PART B that must be added). Next, within your settings.json file you will need to add some spacing as I did in the image above (click for a larger image). …if you aren’t familiar with JSON, before doing anything else you should probably select everything, copy/paste into a new document, and save the new document somewhere so that can undo everything easily if things go wonky. Your file should look something like this: I just used Notepad for this, but any text editor will do. It will ask you to open/edit a JSON file. ![]() Once it’s open, click the little down arrow as seen above, and choose SETTINGS. Open Windows Terminal (the easiest way is to click START and then start typing “Terminal”). With that out of the way, let’s get started! I have duplicate font and opacity methods, as depending on your version, you may need one or the other (duplicates don’t have any negative impact thus far).I copied the % value for transparency, but you may want to experiment here. Transparency/blur doesn’t behave identically in Windows vs the Mac.The newer versions of macOS seem list the standard ANSI colors across every theme. ![]() There is no distinction between normal and bright variants. The colors I used are for older Mac OS X versions of Terminal.Original Apple colors are listed in the code comments anywhere a change was made. I changed a few colors for readability.I added code comments with the original font names in case you’re wanting to go the extra mile. ![]() Fonts aren’t identical since Windows 11 doesn’t come with a number of OSX/macOS fonts.Four and a half years ago I slogged through the process of making the Ubuntu terminal look like the Mac OS X terminal.įast forward to today: when playing with Windows 11, I realized that Microsoft now has a pretty solid terminal program built-in that supports both theming and tabs! A little while later, and…
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