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This is in my top 10 list of tiny annoying things in Linux. I love colored output in terminals: it's nice to see and useful when reading.

The first thing I do on a new system is to set aliases for both ls and grep to show colored output, and the second is to install vim and htop.

I use both Gentoo and Ubuntu, and I see that emerge, the package manager of Gentoo, has a higher readability than apt-get/aptitude just because it uses way much more color output than the latter.

So, whenever I have to pipe an emerge command with more, all the color is lost and I have to focus my attention on every line to avoid missing anything important.

I can understand that a basic command such as more shouldn't depend on ncurses (someone could argue that we also have less, so one of the two could be even color-friendly), but why there isn't a famous alternative to more that supports colors, as there is for vi/vim, top/htop etc.?

Thanks for any hint.

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  • Oops, you are right. But this works only with ls and grep. And for other color-enabled commands like emerge?
    – Avio
    May 27, 2012 at 20:34
  • ... What about it? May 27, 2012 at 20:38
  • I'm sorry, I don't get how unbuffer works. Can you please provide an example with ls, it seems interesting...
    – Avio
    May 27, 2012 at 20:56
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    more does support color, and it has nothing to do with ncurses. Try: printf '\033[31mfoo\033[0;37m\n' | more May 28, 2012 at 16:11

1 Answer 1

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Most commands that can output color have an option to choose between:

  • ON: Always output color
  • OFF: Never output color
  • AUTO: Show color if and only if the output is a terminal

Many commands work automatically in color AUTO mode. That is the case for emerge. And that is why you do not have color when you pipe the output: the pioe is not a terminal.

The solution is to tell emerge to output the colors unconditionally. And tell less not to filter them, of course.

Try:

emerge --color y | less -R
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    @Avio - BTW, you can set -R into the LESS environment variable. That with alias grep='grep --color=always' and alias ls='ls --color=always' works beautifully.
    – rodrigo
    May 27, 2012 at 20:55
  • Ok, thank you, I'll do it! Honestly I almost never used less, I always thought it was a mere alternative to more. Now you'll tell that even nano supports colors? :)
    – Avio
    May 27, 2012 at 21:00
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    @Avio - Of course! nano -Y c test.c. You still have to tweak your nanorc file to include the c.nanorc or whatever syntaxes you want to enable. But that would be another question...
    – rodrigo
    May 27, 2012 at 21:11
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    Avio - Actually more will always show the colors if they are present in the input. The nicest things about less IMO are not colors, but that you can navigate the ouput and do searches (with '/').
    – rodrigo
    May 27, 2012 at 21:14
  • Wow, even nano has colors! It seems that I blacklisted in my mind too many commands. I suppose I'll have to give them another chance. Yes I think you're right, I'll force myself to use less instead of more and search text with it. Thank you for all the advices!
    – Avio
    May 27, 2012 at 21:46

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