This colorscheme uses only 16 distinct colors for the dark or light theme.
It looks best with termguicolors
enabled, but a fallback theme is also
provided if this option is not enabled (e.g. in the Linux vconsole).
It should work on Vim version 8 or later,
and supports additional highlight groups introduced in NeoVim 0.10.
This colorscheme is not affiliated with mellow.nvim.
Screenshots taken on alacritty with LiberationMono font:
For more screenshots, check the wiki, or vimcolorschemes.com.
Install the plugin using your preferred plugin manager. Alternatively, (Neo)Vim
can load packages if they are added to your 'packpath' (see :help packages
).
Archives of tagged releases are available at
https://github.com/adigitoleo/vim-mellow/tags.
Otherwise, please add at least the autoload
, colors
and doc
folders to
your (Neo)Vim package/runtime path (see :help 'runtimepath'
).
After installing the colorscheme, please read :help mellow
for information
on usage and available options. This includes an option to switch the fallback
color codes to ANSI mode instead of the default 256-color fallback palette.
Apply the colorscheme with :colorscheme mellow
.
Two statusline plugins are currently supported:
- Lightline : set the Lightline colorscheme to
'mellow'
, requirestermguicolors
(I don't use this statusline, so please contribute patches or at least report an issue if the integration needs to be fixed) - mellow statusline : my simple ASCII statusline, requires
let g:mellow_user_colors = 1
This theme was first motivated by a lack of bg=light
option in vim-farout,
which uses a similar minimalist set of warm red and yellow colors. I wanted a
light theme with moderate contrast and warm colors, that didn't make me want to
change every single syntax file. To me, Mellow lies mid-way between :syntax off
and popular themes like solarized or gruvbox.
And that's just the way I like it :)
Since the theme uses only 16 colors, you can use the same colors in your terminal of choice. Check the wiki for an example Alacritty theme, as well as experimental Mellow colorschemes for some other Linux stuff.