514

Is there a way to get a list of all installed color schemes in Vim? That would make very easy to select one without looking at the .vim directory.

11 Answers 11

721

Type

:colorscheme then Space followed by TAB.

or as Peter said,

:colorscheme then Space followed by CTRLd

The short version of the command is :colo so you can use it in the two previous commands, instead of using the "long form".

10
  • 3
    <c-d> is actually better if you have lots of scheme installed.
    – Xavier T.
    Sep 7, 2011 at 14:03
  • 2
    Or if you've got :set wildmenu you sorta get the same effect as <c-d> with hitting tab. Nov 10, 2012 at 5:14
  • 1
    Worked for me after I added space after :colorscheme. Maybe it's something trivial, however, it took me time to reveal.
    – jutky
    Feb 4, 2013 at 20:16
  • 7
    :colo isn't really the short-form. It's just completed because there are no conflicting commands. If you made a command like "colobanana", then :colo would have more than one "long form", so it wouldn't work as suggested.
    – dylnmc
    Dec 1, 2016 at 18:39
  • 1
    The website vimcolors does not work anymore. Sep 15, 2022 at 20:04
74

Just for convenient reference. Here is a list of the default set of colour schemes for Vim 7.4:

blue.vim
darkblue.vim,
delek.vim
desert.vim
elflord.vim
evening.vim
industry.vim                                                                                                                                                 
koehler.vim                                                                                                                                                  
morning.vim                                                                                                                                                  
murphy.vim                                                                                                                                                   
pablo.vim                                                                                                                                                    
peachpuff.vim                                                                                                                                                
ron.vim                                                                                                                                                      
shine.vim                                                                                                                                                    
slate.vim                                                                                                                                                    
torte.vim                                                                                                                                                    
zellner.vim 
4
  • 10
    Very helpful list. For those with older eyes, and who are even busier, here are those I found most readable : delek, koehler, slate & zellner. I selected zellner.
    – theRiley
    May 30, 2019 at 16:11
  • 1
    Good choices, but maybe a bit too much of red color for me. I prefer desert, which uses turquoise/light blue. (In vim, type :colors desert)
    – HAltos
    Jul 15, 2019 at 16:52
  • 2
    I've always used torte which to me seems to have good contrast and doesn't try to be a "style", and doesn't "waste contrast bandwidth" by making the colours similar.
    – NeilG
    Sep 30, 2019 at 22:48
  • 1
    To get this list for your version of vim, execute from within vim :! ls $VIMRUNTIME/colors
    – AliA
    Jun 5, 2023 at 16:49
63

You can see the list of color schemes under /usr/share/vim/vimNN/colors (with NN being the version, e.g. vim74 for vim 7.4).

This is explained here.

On the linux servers I use via ssh, TAB prints ^I and CTRLd prints ^D.

6
  • 12
    That misses the color schemes installed by the user (under the home directory). Oct 5, 2013 at 12:13
  • 5
    The path to the color tables, exactly what I was looking for thanks! Dec 12, 2013 at 5:06
  • 1
    Note that the NN in vimNN will correspond to the version of vim, e.g. vim74 for vim 7.4. Just wanted to point this out because I'm slow and it made me do a double take when I went to look ;)
    – Adam P
    Nov 29, 2016 at 3:39
  • 1
    @AdamP I added the precision in the answer.
    – Fabien
    Nov 30, 2016 at 13:22
  • If you don't have the folder /usr/share/vim/ you may have a minimal version of vim installed. In my case (a RHEL 8 vm) it came with vim-minimal only. I installed vim-enhanced which provided the color schemes. Jul 22, 2022 at 21:55
17

If you are willing to install a plugin, I recommend https://github.com/vim-scripts/CycleColor.

to cycle through all installed colorschemes. Nice way to easily choose a colorscheme.

10

Looking at my system's menu.vim (look for 'Color Scheme submenu') and @chappar's answer, I came up with the following function:

" Returns the list of available color schemes
function! GetColorSchemes()
   return uniq(sort(map(
   \  globpath(&runtimepath, "colors/*.vim", 0, 1),  
   \  'fnamemodify(v:val, ":t:r")'
   \)))
endfunction

It does the following:

  1. Gets the list of available color scheme scripts under all runtime paths (globpath, runtimepath)
  2. Maps the script paths to their base names (strips parent dirs and extension) (map, fnamemodify)
  3. Sorts and removes duplicates (uniq, sort)

Then to use the function I do something like this:

let s:schemes = GetColorSchemes()
if index(s:schemes, 'solarized') >= 0
   colorscheme solarized
elseif index(s:schemes, 'darkblue') >= 0
   colorscheme darkblue
endif

Which means I prefer the 'solarized' and then the 'darkblue' schemes; if none of them is available, do nothing.

9

Here is a small function I wrote to try all the colorschemes in $VIMRUNTIME/colors directory.

Add the below function to your vimrc, then open your source file and call the function from command.

function! DisplayColorSchemes()
   let currDir = getcwd()
   exec "cd $VIMRUNTIME/colors"
   for myCol in split(glob("*"), '\n')
      if myCol =~ '\.vim'
         let mycol = substitute(myCol, '\.vim', '', '')
         exec "colorscheme " . mycol
         exec "redraw!"
         echo "colorscheme = ". myCol
         sleep 2
      endif
   endfor
   exec "cd " . currDir
endfunction
1
  • 1
    call DisplayColorSchemes()
    – Haagenti
    Jun 13, 2015 at 12:35
8

If you have your vim compiled with +menu, you can follow menus with the :help of console-menu. From there, you can navigate to Edit.Color\ Scheme to get the same list as with in gvim.

Other method is to use a cool script ScrollColors that previews the colorschemes while you scroll the schemes with j/k.

5

i know i am late for this answer but the correct answer seems to be

See :help getcompletion():

:echo getcompletion('', 'color')

which you can assign to a variable:

:let foo = getcompletion('', 'color')

or use in an expression register:

:put=getcompletion('', 'color')

This is not my answer, this solution is provided by u/romainl in this post on reddit.

3

A great solution, and my thanks to your contributors. For years I've been struggling with a totally crappy color scheme -- using SSH under Windows Vista to a Redhat system, terminal type xterm. The editor would come up with a black background and weird colors for various keywords. Worse -- that weird color scheme sticks in the xterm terminal after leaving Vim.

Really confusing.

Also, Backspace failed during an insert mode, which was nasty to remember -- though Delete did the same thing.

The cure --

  1. In the SSH monitor, select Edit/Settings.

    a. Choose Profile Settings/Colors

    b. check 'enable ANSI colors'

    c. The standard Text colors are probably OK

  2. Add these lines to $HOME/.vimrc:

    colorscheme default

    if &term == "xterm"

    set t_kb=^H

    fixdel

    endif

  3. NOTE: the ^H MUST be typed as ctrl-V ctrl-H. Seems peculiar, but this seems to work.

2

Try

set wildmenu
set wildmode=list:full
set wildcharm=<C-z>
let mapleader=','
nnoremap <leader>c :colorscheme <C-z><S-Tab>

in your ~/.vimrc.

The first two lines make possible matches appear as lists. You can use either or both.

The fourth line makes leader , instead of the default \.

The last line allows you to simply type ,c to get a list and a prompt to change your colorscheme.

The third line effectively allows for Tabs to appear in key maps.

(Of course, all of these strategies I've learned from the internet, and mostly SO, very recently.)

1
  • If I'm reading this right, <C-z> (and I may not be) will remap the default ctrl-z to background your editor, which is something I do all the time. So beware of binding this keymap if you don't know what you're doing.
    – Jim
    Jan 27, 2022 at 5:54
1

Another simpler way is while you are editing a file - tabe ~/.vim/colors/ ENTER Will open all the themes in a new tab within vim window.

You may come back to the file you were editing using - CTRL + W + W ENTER

Note: Above will work ONLY IF YOU HAVE a .vim/colors directory within your home directory for current $USER (I have 70+ themes)

[user@host ~]$ ls -l ~/.vim/colors | wc -l

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