On 2021-10-25 at 22:32:36, Robert Estelle via GitGitGadget wrote: > From: Robert Estelle > > The name "default" can now be used in foreground or background colors, > and means to use the terminal's default color, discarding any > explicitly-set color without affecting the other attributes. On many > modern terminals, this is *not* the same as specifying "white" or > "black". > > Although attributes could previously be cleared like "no-bold", there > had not been a similar mechanism available for colors, other than a full > "reset", which cannot currently be combined with other settings. > > Note that this is *not* the same as the existing name "normal", which is > a no-op placeholder to permit setting the background without changing > the foreground. (i.e. what is currently called "normal" might have been > more descriptively named "inherit", "none", "pass" or similar). I can't speak to whether this is correct, although you did mention the standard, so I assume it is, but I do think this is a good feature to have and the patch seems sane to me. Patch 2 also looked good here. For an example of why this differs from white on black, let me mention that I use a semi-transparent terminal, where a black background is opaque black, and the default is semi-transparent. I assume other possibilities include patterned backgrounds (Enlightenment, anyone?). Whether you want to include something to this effect in the commit message is up to you, but I provide it for the interested reader. -- brian m. carlson (he/him or they/them) Toronto, Ontario, CA