The option (`pygmentize -f terminal <...>`) lets pygments use terminal color scheme. Otherwise, it would use its default colors, which might be unbalanced with that of terminal (e.g. not harmonious with background color of terminal).
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ colorize_via_pygmentize() {
# pygmentize stdin if no arguments passed
if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
- pygmentize -g
+ pygmentize -f terminal -g
return $?
fi
@@ -20,9 +20,9 @@ colorize_via_pygmentize() {
do
lexer=$(pygmentize -N "$FNAME")
if [[ $lexer != text ]]; then
- pygmentize -l "$lexer" "$FNAME"
+ pygmentize -f terminal -l "$lexer" "$FNAME"
else
- pygmentize -g "$FNAME"
+ pygmentize -f terminal -g "$FNAME"
done
}