377 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
377 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
<%
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# RNB, A VIM COLORSCHEME TEMPLATE
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# Author: Romain Lafourcade (https://github.com/romainl)
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# Canonical URL: https://github.com/romainl/vim-rnb
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# This template is designed to help vimmers create their own colorschemes
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# without much effort.
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#
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# You will need Ruby to generate your colorscheme but Ruby knowledge is
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# not needed at all.
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#
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# The process is divided in five steps:
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# 1. rename the template,
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# 2. edit your colorscheme's information,
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# 3. define your colors,
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# 4. define your highlight groups and links,
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# 5. and generate your colorscheme.
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# Step 1: renaming
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#
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# If this file is distributed with a colorscheme it's probably already named correctly
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# and you can skip this step.
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#
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# If you forked/cloned/copied this repository to create your own colorscheme, you will have to
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# rename this template to match the name of your colorscheme.
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#
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# NOTE: Vim doesn't really care about whitespace in the name of the colorscheme but it does for
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# filenames so make sure your filename doesn't have any whitespace character.
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#
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# colorscheme name | template filename | colorscheme filename
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# ------------------|-------------------|----------------------
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# foobar | foobar.erb | foobar.vim
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# foo-bar | foo-bar.erb | foo-bar.vim
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# foo_bar | foo_bar.erb | foo_bar.vim
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# foo bar | foo-bar.erb or | foo-bar.vim or
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# | foo_bar.erb | foo_bar.vim
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# Step 2: information
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#
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# Make sure the name of your colorscheme is unique and attractive.
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# The description should fit in a single line with no linefeed.
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# 'background' can be "light" or "dark".
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information = {
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author: "foo",
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email: "foo@foo.foo",
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name: "rnb",
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description: "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.",
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background: "light",
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webpage: "http://www.example.com"
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}
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# Step 3: colors
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#
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# black = [ give each color a distinctive name
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# "#000000", hexadecimal color used in GVim/MacVim or "NONE"
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# 0, integer between 0 and 255 used by terminals supporting 256 colors
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# or "NONE"
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# "black" color name used by less capable color terminals, can be "darkred",
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# "red", "darkgreen", "green", "darkyellow", "yellow", "darkblue",
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# "blue", "darkmagenta", "magenta", "black", "darkgrey", "grey",
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# "white", or "NONE"
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# ]
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#
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# If your colors are defined correctly, the resulting colorscheme is guaranteed
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# to work in GVim (Windows/Linux), MacVim (MacOS), and any properly set up terminal emulator.
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#
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# The colors below are the first 16 colors of the xterm palette. They
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# are only here as an example, though, so you can get rid of them, I won't be mad.
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black = ["#000000", 0, "black"]
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darkred = ["#800000", 1, "darkred"]
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darkgreen = ["#008000", 2, "darkgreen"]
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darkyellow = ["#808000", 3, "darkyellow"]
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darkblue = ["#000080", 4, "darkblue"]
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darkmagenta = ["#800080", 5, "darkmagenta"]
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darkcyan = ["#008080", 6, "darkcyan"]
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gray = ["#c0c0c0", 7, "gray"]
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darkgray = ["#808080", 8, "darkgray"]
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red = ["#ff0000", 9, "red"]
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green = ["#00ff00", 10, "green"]
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yellow = ["#ffff00", 11, "yellow"]
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blue = ["#0000ff", 12, "blue"]
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magenta = ["#ff00ff", 13, "magenta"]
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cyan = ["#00ffff", 14, "cyan"]
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white = ["#ffffff", 15, "white"]
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# Step 4: highlights
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#
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# You can define highlight groups like this:
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#
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# [ "Normal", name of the highlight group
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# white, the color used for background color, or use "NONE", "fg" or "bg"
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# darkgray, the color used for foreground color, or use "NONE", "fg" or "bg"
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# "NONE" style, can be "bold", "underline", "reverse", "italic",
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# "standout", "NONE" or "undercurl"
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# ]
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#
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# The sample above tells Vim to render normal text in dark gray against a white
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# background, without any other styling.
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#
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# Or you can link an highlight group to another. Here, "Title" will inherit its style from
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# "Normal":
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#
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# [ "Title", "Normal" ]
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#
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# In GUI Vim, there is an additional color for the undercurl used to
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# highlight spelling mistakes:
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#
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# [ "SpellBad", name of the highlight group
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# "NONE", the color used for background color, or use "NONE", "fg" or "bg"
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# red, the color used for foreground color, or use "NONE", "fg" or "bg"
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# "undercurl", style
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# red color used for the undercurl
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# ]
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#
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# The sample above tells Vim to render badly spelled words in red against the current
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# background, with a red undercurl.
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#
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# You can add any custom highlight group to the standard list below but you shouldn't
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# remove any if you want a working colorscheme. Most of them are described under
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# :help highlight-default, the others are taken from :help group-name. Both help sections
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# are good reads, by the way.
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highlights = [
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[ "Normal", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "NonText", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "EndOfBuffer", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Comment", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Constant", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Error", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Identifier", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Ignore", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "PreProc", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Special", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Statement", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "String", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Number", "Constant" ],
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[ "Todo", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Type", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Underlined", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "StatusLine", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "StatusLineNC", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "StatusLineTerm", "StatusLine" ],
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[ "StatusLineTermNC", "StatusLineNC" ],
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[ "VertSplit", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "TabLine", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "TabLineFill", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "TabLineSel", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Title", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "CursorLine", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "LineNr", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "CursorLineNr", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "helpLeadBlank", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "helpNormal", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Visual", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "VisualNOS", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Pmenu", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "PmenuSbar", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "PmenuSel", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "PmenuThumb", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "FoldColumn", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Folded", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "WildMenu", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "SpecialKey", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "DiffAdd", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "DiffChange", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "DiffDelete", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "DiffText", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "IncSearch", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Search", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Directory", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "MatchParen", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "SpellBad", white, darkgray, "NONE", red ],
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[ "SpellCap", white, darkgray, "NONE", blue ],
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[ "SpellLocal", white, darkgray, "NONE", magenta ],
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[ "SpellRare", white, darkgray, "NONE", cyan ],
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[ "ColorColumn", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "SignColumn", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "ErrorMsg", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "ModeMsg", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "MoreMsg", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Question", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "WarningMsg", "Error" ],
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[ "Cursor", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "CursorIM", "Cursor" ],
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[ "CursorColumn", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "QuickFixLine", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "Terminal", "Normal" ],
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[ "Conceal", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "ToolbarLine", white, darkgray, "NONE" ],
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[ "ToolbarButton", white, darkgray, "NONE" ]
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]
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# Define the color palette used by :terminal when in GUI Vim
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# or in TUI Vim when 'termguicolors' is enabled. If this list
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# is empty or if it doesn't contain exactly 16 items, the corresponding
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# Vim variable won't be set.
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#
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# The expected values are colors defined in step 3.
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#
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# Terminal emulators use a basic palette of 16 colors that can be
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# addressed by CLI and TUI tools via their name or their index, from
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# 0 to 15. The list is not really standardized but it is generally
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# assumed to look like this:
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#
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# Index | Name
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# -------|-------------
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# 0 | black
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# 1 | darkred
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# 2 | darkgreen
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# 3 | darkyellow
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# 4 | darkblue
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# 5 | darkmagenta
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# 6 | darkcyan
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# 7 | gray
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# 8 | darkgray
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# 9 | red
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# 10 | green
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# 11 | yellow
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# 12 | blue
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# 13 | magenta
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# 14 | cyan
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# 15 | white
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#
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# While you are certainly free to make colors 0 to 7 shades of blue,
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# this will inevitably cause usability issues so… be careful.
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terminal_ansi_colors = [
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black,
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darkred,
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darkgreen,
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darkyellow,
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darkblue,
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darkmagenta,
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darkcyan,
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gray,
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darkgray,
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red,
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green,
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yellow,
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blue,
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magenta,
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cyan,
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white
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]
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# Step 5: generation
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#
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# From a separate shell:
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#
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# $ erb -T - bar.erb > bar.vim
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#
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# From Vim:
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#
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# :!erb -T - % > %<.vim
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#
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# If this template comes with a Makefile, you can do it from a separate shell,
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# with the make program:
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#
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# $ make
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# These online resources can help you design your colorscheme:
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#
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# * http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/15/Xterm_256color_chart.svg
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# the xterm palette
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# * http://whatcolor.herokuapp.com/
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# play with hexadecimal colors right in the address bar (currently down)
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# * http://color.hailpixel.com/
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# similar concept, fuzzier implementation
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# * http://colourco.de/
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# similar concept, fancier implementation
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# * http://www.colr.org/
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# extract a palette from an image
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# * http://colores.manugarri.com/
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# search for 'word', get images and color palettes
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# * http://www.colourlovers.com/palettes
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# user-created palettes
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# * http://www.perbang.dk/color+scheme/
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# a no-nonsense colorscheme generator
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# * https://color.adobe.com/
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# Adobe's fancy colorscheme generator
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# * http://paletton.com/
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# The classic 'Color Scheme Designer', rebranded
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# * http://vrl.cs.brown.edu/color
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# A very smart palette generator
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# * https://cmcenroe.me/2018/04/03/colour-scheme.html
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# "I Made My Own Colour Scheme and You Can Too!"
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# A few general advices:
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#
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# * The Windows console is limited to the 16 so-called "ANSI" colors but it used to
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# have a few of them interverted which makes numbers impractical. Use color names
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# instead of numbers: :help cterm-colors
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# * The Windows console (yeah…) doesn't do italics, underlines or bolded text;
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# it is limited to normal and reverse. Keep that in mind if you want
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# your colorscheme to be usable in as many environments as possible by as many
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# people as possible.
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# * Actually, terminal emulators rarely do italics.
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# * All of the terminal emulators in use these days allow their users to
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# change the 16 so-called "ANSI" colors. It is also possible on some platforms
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# to change some or all of the 256 colors in the xterm palette. Don't take
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# anything for granted.
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# * When used against a light background, strong colors work better than muted
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# ones. Light or dark doesn't really matters. Also, it is harder to discriminate
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# between two similar colors on a light background.
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# * Both strong and muted colors work well against a dark background. It is also
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# easier to work with similar colors, but dark colors don't work at all.
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# * Use as many text samples as possible. String-heavy languages may look completely
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# different than keyword-heavy ones. This can have an impact on the usability
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# of your colorscheme.
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# * Most terminal emulators and terminal multiplexers currently in use on unix-like
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# systems support 256 colors but they almost always default to a '$TERM' that tells
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# Vim otherwise. Your users will need to make sure their terminal emulator/multiplexer
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# is correctly set up if they want to enjoy the best possible experience.
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# Many thanks to Barry Arthur (https://github.com/dahu) for the original idea.
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# You don't need to edit anything beyond this line.
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-%>
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" <%= information[:name] %>.vim -- Vim color scheme.
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" Author: <%= information[:author] %> (<%= information[:email] %>)
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" Webpage: <%= information[:webpage] %>
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" Description: <%= information[:description] %>
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hi clear
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if exists("syntax_on")
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syntax reset
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endif
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let colors_name = "<%= information[:name].downcase %>"
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if ($TERM =~ '256' || &t_Co >= 256) || has("gui_running")
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<% for highlight in highlights -%>
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<% if highlight.length == 4 -%>
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hi <%= highlight[0] %> ctermbg=<%= highlight[1].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[1] : highlight[1][1] %> ctermfg=<%= highlight[2].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[2] : highlight[2][1] %> cterm=<%= highlight[3] %> guibg=<%= highlight[1].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[1] : highlight[1][0] %> guifg=<%= highlight[2].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[2] : highlight[2][0] %> gui=<%= highlight[3] %>
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<% if highlight[0] == "Normal" -%>
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<%= '' %>
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set background=<%= information[:background] %>
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<%= '' %>
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<% end -%>
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<% elsif highlight.length > 4 -%>
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hi <%= highlight[0] %> ctermbg=<%= highlight[1].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[1] : highlight[1][1] %> ctermfg=<%= highlight[2].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[2] : highlight[2][1] %> cterm=<%= highlight[3] %> guibg=<%= highlight[1].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[1] : highlight[1][0] %> guifg=<%= highlight[2].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[2] : highlight[2][0] %> gui=<%= highlight[3] %> guisp=<%= highlight[4].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[4] : highlight[4][0] %>
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<% end -%>
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<% end -%>
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elseif &t_Co == 8 || $TERM !~# '^linux' || &t_Co == 16
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set t_Co=16
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<%= '' %>
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<% for highlight in highlights -%>
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<% if highlight.length > 2 -%>
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hi <%= highlight[0] %> ctermbg=<%= highlight[1].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[1] : highlight[1][2] %> ctermfg=<%= highlight[2].kind_of?(String) ? highlight[2] : highlight[2][2] %> cterm=<%= highlight[3] %>
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<% if highlight[0] == "Normal" -%>
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<%= '' %>
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set background=<%= information[:background] %>
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<%= '' %>
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<% end -%>
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<% end -%>
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<% end -%>
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endif
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<% links = highlights.select do |highlight| -%>
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<% highlight.length == 2 -%>
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<% end -%>
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<% if links.length > 0 -%>
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<%= '' %>
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<% for link in links -%>
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hi link <%= link[0] %> <%= link[1] %>
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<% end -%>
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<% end -%>
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<% if terminal_ansi_colors.length == 16 -%>
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<%= '' %>
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let g:terminal_ansi_colors = [
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<% for color in terminal_ansi_colors -%>
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\ '<%= color[0] %>',
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<% end -%>
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\ ]
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<% end -%>
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" Generated with RNB (https://github.com/romainl/vim-rnb)
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