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On a color display, you can specify which color to use for various parts of
the Emacs display. To find out what colors are available on your system,
type M-x list-colors-display, or press C-Mouse-2 and select
‘Display Colors’ from the pop-up menu. (A particular window system
might support many more colors, but the list displayed by
list-colors-display
shows their portable subset that can be safely
used on any display supported by Emacs.) If you do not specify colors, on
windowed displays the default for the background is white and the default
for all other colors is black. On a monochrome display, the foreground is
black, the background is white, and the border is gray if the display
supports that. On terminals, the background is usually black and the
foreground is white.
Here is a list of the command-line options for specifying colors:
Specify the foreground color. color should be a standard color name, or a numeric specification of the color's red, green, and blue components as in ‘#4682B4’ or ‘RGB:46/82/B4’.
Specify the background color.
Specify the color of the border of the X window.
Specify the color of the Emacs cursor which indicates where point is.
Specify the color for the mouse cursor when the mouse is in the Emacs window.
Reverse video—swap the foreground and background colors.
For a character terminal only, specify the mode of color support. This
option is intended for overriding the number of supported colors that the
character terminal advertises in its termcap
or terminfo
database. The parameter mode can be one of the following:
Don't use colors even if the terminal's capabilities specify color support.
Same as when ‘--color’ is not used at all: Emacs detects at startup whether the terminal supports colors, and if it does, turns on colored display.
Turn on the color support unconditionally, and use color commands specified by the ANSI escape sequences for the 8 standard colors.
Use color mode for num colors. If num is -1, turn off color support (equivalent to ‘never’); if it is 0, use the default color support for this terminal (equivalent to ‘auto’); otherwise use an appropriate standard mode for num colors. Depending on your terminal's capabilities, Emacs might be able to turn on a color mode for 8, 16, 88, or 256 as the value of num. If there is no mode that supports num colors, Emacs acts as if num were 0, i.e. it uses the terminal's default color support mode.
If mode is omitted, it defaults to ansi8.
For example, to use a coral mouse cursor and a slate blue text cursor, enter:
emacs -ms coral -cr 'slate blue' & |
You can reverse the foreground and background colors through the ‘-rv’ option or with the X resource ‘reverseVideo’.
The ‘-fg’, ‘-bg’, and ‘-rv’ options function on text-only terminals as well as on graphical displays.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.