How do I change the ~/.vimrc
to have the comments in my code italicized?
In my ~/.vimrc
file I have:
highlight Comment ctermfg=blue
that makes the comments blue. What do I need to do differently to make them italic?
How do I change the ~/.vimrc
to have the comments in my code italicized?
In my ~/.vimrc
file I have:
highlight Comment ctermfg=blue
that makes the comments blue. What do I need to do differently to make them italic?
michaelmichael's answer should solve it for most cases. But, just in case you need this for a font in gvim that doesn't have italics (but oblique or something instead), you can try something like this in ~/.gvimrc
where h14 is the font size. This font should have the same cell size as your normal font though, so don't use an altogether different font.
You'll need a font with an italic set and a terminal capable of displaying italics. Also, if you're using a color scheme other than the default, the above line should come after the color scheme is loaded in your
~/.vimrc
so that the color scheme doesn't override it.The
cterm
makes it work in the terminal and thegui
is for graphical Vim clients.for GUI environments like gvim, a simple
does it.
First and foremost, you should check if you terminal is capable of displaying text in italics. In your terminal type (
-e
flag makes sure escape codes are interpreted)If you see
foo
then okay, otherwise you need to change terminal (Gnome Terminal and Konsole are good choices).Then you should help Vim to recognise the kind of terminal you are using, put in you
~/.bashrc
:Now you can try and see if this is enough, open a new file
vim foo.html
with the following contentDo you see
foo
in italic? If no then you need to go a little further, right now Vim doesn't know the escape codes to switch to italic mode, you need to tell it (this is the hardest part, it took me a few years to figure that out).Put the following two lines in your
~/.vimrc
These are the same escape codes we used before in the terminal, be aware that
^[
are not literal characters but represent the escape character, you can insert it in insert mode with CTRL-V followed by ESC (see:help i_CTRL-V
)Now reopen the file we created before
foo.html
and you should seefoo
in italic; if you don't then I can't help you any more. Otherwise you are almost done; there is one last step.Put in you
~/.vimrc
fileafter loading any colorscheme.
In my case I had to put this in my
vimrc
file:Notice it is not the same as:
The former worked for me, while the latter didn't.