Wednesday, May 15, 2013

outputs a grid of 256 colors for checking your terminal in console

outputs a grid of 256 colors for checking your terminal in console

It should look like this:


256colors2.pl from http://www.frexx.de/xterm-256-notes/data/256colors2.pl
#!/usr/bin/perl
# Author: Todd Larason <jtl@molehill.org>
# $XFree86: xc/programs/xterm/vttests/256colors2.pl,v 1.2 2002/03/26 01:46:43 dickey Exp $

# use the resources for colors 0-15 - usually more-or-less a
# reproduction of the standard ANSI colors, but possibly more
# pleasing shades

# colors 16-231 are a 6x6x6 color cube
for ($red = 0; $red < 6; $red++) {
    for ($green = 0; $green < 6; $green++) {
 for ($blue = 0; $blue < 6; $blue++) {
     printf("\x1b]4;%d;rgb:%2.2x/%2.2x/%2.2x\x1b\\",
     16 + ($red * 36) + ($green * 6) + $blue,
     ($red ? ($red * 40 + 55) : 0),
     ($green ? ($green * 40 + 55) : 0),
     ($blue ? ($blue * 40 + 55) : 0));
 }
    }
}

# colors 232-255 are a grayscale ramp, intentionally leaving out
# black and white
for ($gray = 0; $gray < 24; $gray++) {
    $level = ($gray * 10) + 8;
    printf("\x1b]4;%d;rgb:%2.2x/%2.2x/%2.2x\x1b\\",
    232 + $gray, $level, $level, $level);
}


# display the colors

# first the system ones:
print "System colors:\n";
for ($color = 0; $color < 8; $color++) {
    print "\x1b[48;5;${color}m  ";
}
print "\x1b[0m\n";
for ($color = 8; $color < 16; $color++) {
    print "\x1b[48;5;${color}m  ";
}
print "\x1b[0m\n\n";

# now the color cube
print "Color cube, 6x6x6:\n";
for ($green = 0; $green < 6; $green++) {
    for ($red = 0; $red < 6; $red++) {
 for ($blue = 0; $blue < 6; $blue++) {
     $color = 16 + ($red * 36) + ($green * 6) + $blue;
     print "\x1b[48;5;${color}m  ";
 }
 print "\x1b[0m ";
    }
    print "\n";
}


# now the grayscale ramp
print "Grayscale ramp:\n";
for ($color = 232; $color < 256; $color++) {
    print "\x1b[48;5;${color}m  ";
}
print "\x1b[0m\n";

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