How to tell which colorscheme a Vim session currently uses
You can set the Vim color scheme by issuing
:colorscheme SCHEME_NAME
but, oddly enough, you ca开发者_如何学JAVAn't get the currently used scheme by issuing
:colorscheme
as this results in "E471: Argument required
". I also don't see the color scheme listed in the output of :set
.
So how do you go about figuring out the current color scheme in use (other than manually switching the themes until you recognize it)?
There's no guaranteed way (as a colour scheme is essentially a load of vim commands that are sourced). However, by convention there should be a variable g:colors_name
that is set to the name of the colour scheme.
Therefore, try this:
echo g:colors_name
If you get E121, it's either a poorly made colour scheme or it's the default one.
A shinier way of doing this is (for recent versions of vim):
function! ShowColourSchemeName()
try
echo g:colors_name
catch /^Vim:E121/
echo "default"
endtry
endfunction
Then do:
:call ShowColourSchemeName()
If it says "default", do :colorscheme default
and see if the colours change. If they do, you're using a malformed colour scheme and there's not a lot you can do about it other than manually switching themes until you recognise it.
The variable g:colors_name
is documented here:
:help colorscheme
Best option is to use :colo
or :colorscheme
in current vim and the actual colorscheme text is shown. Please see,
:help colorscheme
for more details.
A one-line version of DrAl's answer:
let current_scheme = get(g:, 'colors_name', 'default')
The get()
function will fall back to 'default'
if the variable has not yet been set.
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