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My Emacs installation has full color support (list-colors-display shows this). However, Emacs *shell* only appears to be able to handle the basic 8 ANSI color escapes. I have those handled by the following in my .emacs:

(autoload 'ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on "ansi-color" nil t)
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook 'ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on)

Is there a way to increase the number of colors supported in *shell*?

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  • Is Emacs running in a terminal already or as an X / OS X / Win32 frame?
    – ocodo
    Apr 12, 2013 at 2:03
  • I also cannot get M-x shell, M-x eshell, M-x term, M-x ansi term to produce 256 colors. But yesterday I tried M-x vterm and it can. You will need to compile and install github.com/akermu/emacs-libvterm first. You might need to recompile your Emacs first if it was not compiled with --with-modules option. It probably does not work on Windows (haven't checked).
    – Perl Ancar
    Aug 6, 2021 at 0:23

2 Answers 2

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To get 256-color in terminal you must use appropriate terminal emulator.

Check if your terminal suport this:

  $ infocmp -1 $TERM | grep colors
colors#8,

For example xterm allow this, but you must set TERM=xterm-256color.

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  • I did not downvote but Derek is asking not about any terminal emulator, but about emacs shell-mode.
    – Yuki
    Nov 2, 2019 at 16:58
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If I'm reading correctly setting ansi flags/settings will only allow 8 colors,get rid of them and replace with this setting tty-color-mode 256

From:

http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/elisp/html_node/Font-and-Color-Parameters.html

http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/manual/emacs/Colors.html

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  • 1
    Hmm, no I haven't been able to get it to work playing around with this variable. I think this has more to do with the colors emacs itself supports than the colors that *shell* supports. If you're able to do it this way, can you elaborate? Jul 19, 2011 at 17:56

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