You could use the value of $TERM
to decide if you have a color terminal or not, but this value could be modified. The question is where this environment variable is being set when a new terminal window is opened.
This would be in the .bashrc
file. However, a word of warning:
- The value of
$TERM
may be a lie. This is just an environment variable that's set. How it is set is determined by the terminal program (on the Mac, the Terminal.app
can set the terminal to xterm
, xterm-color
, vt100
, ansi
, and several others..
- The terminal could be a color terminal, but doesn't use ANSI color codes. You could be in trouble if you simply assume that a particular escape sequence gets you a particular color.
- If your prompt is set in the
.bashrc
file, changing the value of $TERM
won't change the prompt.
That said, I would probably do something like this:
case $TERM in
*color*) PS1=...;;
*) PS1=...;;
esac
This way, my terminal will be set to color if I said it was an xterm-color
or xterm-256color
.