🎨 Generate and change color-schemes on the fly.
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wal (Python 3 version)

MIT licensed Build Status

wal is a script that takes an image (or a directory of images), generates a colorscheme (using imagemagick) and then changes all of your open terminal's colorschemes to the new colors on the fly. wal then caches each generated colorscheme so that cycling through wallpapers while changing colorschemes is instantaneous. wal finally merges the new colorscheme into the Xresources db so that any new terminal emulators you open use the new colorscheme.

wal can also change the colors in some other programs, check out the Customization section below.

NOTE: wal is not perfect and won't work with some images.

Albums of examples (Warning large)

screen

Table of Contents

Requirements

Dependencies

  • python 3.6
  • imagemagick
    • Colorscheme generation
  • xfce, gnome, cinnamon, mate
    • Desktop wallpaper setting.
  • feh, nitrogen, bgs, hsetroot, habak
    • Universal wallpaper setting.

Terminal Emulator

To use wal your terminal emulator must support a special type of escape sequence. The command below can be used as a test to see if wal will work with your setup.

Run the command below, does the background color of your terminal become red?

printf "%b" "\033]11;#ff0000\007"

If your terminal's background color is now red, your terminal will work with wal.

Installation

Pip install

pip install pywal

Manual install

Just grab the script (wal) and add it to your path.

Setup

NOTE: If you get junk in your terminal, add -t to all of the wal commands.

Applying the theme to new terminals.

wal only applies the new colors to the currently open terminals. Any new terminal windows you open won't be using the new theme unless you add a single line to your shell's start up file. (.bashrc, .zshrc etc.) The -r flags tells wal to find the current colorscheme inside the cache and then set it for the new terminal.

Add this line to your shell startup file. (.bashrc, .zshrc or etc.)

# Import colorscheme from 'wal'
(wal -r &)

Here's how the extra syntax above works:

&   # Run the process in the background.
( ) # Hide shell job control messages.

Making the colorscheme persist on reboot.

On reboot your new colorscheme won't be set or in use. To fix this you have to add a line to your .xinitrc or whatever file starts programs on your system. This wal command will set your wallpaper to the wallpaper that was set last boot and also apply the colorscheme again.

Without this you'll be themeless until you run wal again on boot.

# Add this to your .xinitrc or whatever file starts programs on startup.
wal -i "$(< "${HOME}/.cache/wal/wal")"

Usage

Run wal and point it to either a directory (wal -i "path/to/dir") or an image (wal -i "/path/to/img.jpg") and that's all. wal will change your wallpaper for you and also set your terminal colors.

usage: wal [-h] [-c] [-i "/path/to/img.jpg"] [-n] [-o "script_name"] [-q] [-r]
           [-t] [-v]

wal - Generate colorschemes on the fly

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -c                    Delete all cached colorschemes.
  -i "/path/to/img.jpg"
                        Which image or directory to use.
  -n                    Skip setting the wallpaper.
  -o "script_name"      External script to run after "wal".
  -q                    Quiet mode, don"t print anything.
  -r                    Reload current colorscheme.
  -t                    Fix artifacts in VTE Terminals. (Termite,
                        xfce4-terminal)
  -v                    Print "wal" version.

Plugins

Listed below are plugins for other programs that add support for wal colors.

Hyper Terminal

https://github.com/dneustadt/hyper-wal

Customization

I've written another script [1] for personal use only that updates my lemonbar, dunst and startpage colors with the new ones from wal when run.

What I've done is bind both wal and my custom script to the same key so that after wal has done its thing my custom script applies the colors to the rest of my environment.

# i3 config.
# ...

# Cycle wallpapers and apply new colorscheme.
bindsym $mod+w exec "wal -i $HOME/Pictures/Wallpapers -o wal-set"

Now whenever I press Win+w a random wallpaper is chosen and all of the programs on my system start using the new colors immediately.

I've also set wal and my custom script to start with X. This means that when I boot my PC a random wallpaper is chosen and colors are generated + applied to all of my programs.

# .xinitrc
wal -i "$HOME/Pictures/Wallpapers" -o wal-set
exec i3

Have a look at my script to see how wal is used and how the programs get reloaded with the new colors.

1

NOTE: wal stores the exported files in $HOME/.cache/wal/

i3

To use wal with i3 you have to make some modifications to your i3 config file.

i3 can read colors from Xresources into config variables! This allows us to change i3's colors dynamically. On run wal will detect that you're running i3 and reload your config for you. If you've set it up correctly i3 will then use your new colorscheme.

Example:

# Set colors from Xresources
# Change 'color7' and 'color2' to whatever colors you want i3 to use
# from the generated scheme.
# NOTE: The '#f0f0f0' in the lines below is the color i3 will use if
# it fails to get colors from Xresources for some reason.
set_from_resource $fg i3wm.color7 #f0f0f0
set_from_resource $bg i3wm.color2 #f0f0f0

# class                 border  backgr. text indicator child_border
client.focused          $bg     $bg     $fg  $bg       $bg
client.focused_inactive $bg     $bg     $fg  $bg       $bg
client.unfocused        $bg     $bg     $fg  $bg       $bg
client.urgent           $bg     $bg     $fg  $bg       $bg
client.placeholder      $bg     $bg     $fg  $bg       $bg

client.background       $bg

# PROTIP: You can also dynamically set dmenu's colors this way:
bindsym $mod+d exec dmenu_run -nb "$fg" -nf "$bg" -sb "$bg" -sf "$fg"

rofi

wal updates rofi's colors for you out of the box, automatically.

vim

I've created a vim colorscheme for use with with the colors wal generates and you can install it using any vim package manager. The colorscheme uses your terminal colors so it'll adapt to the colorscheme changes automatically.

You can find the colorscheme here: https://github.com/dylanaraps/wal.vim

Example:

! Using plug
Plug 'dylanaraps/wal.vim'

colorscheme wal

Emacs

Install this package, which will make Emacs use your X environment's colors instead of its default colors.

polybar

Polybar can read colors from Xresources to set the bar's colors.

Example:

fg = ${xrdb:color7}
bg = ${xrdb:color2}

iTerm2

There's a script called wal2iterm in contrib/wal2iterm which converts the generated colors to an importable iTerm2 colorscheme.

The themes are stored in the wal cache directory. (${HOME}/.cache/wal/itermcolors).

Example:

wal -i "IMAGE" -o "/path/to/wal2iterm/wal2iterm"

Shell Variables

wal also exports the colorscheme as a list of shell variables that you can source for use in scripts and the shell.

Example:

# Add this line to your .bashrc or a shell script.
source "$HOME/.cache/wal/colors.sh"

In the shell:

# Once the file is sourced you can use the colors like this:

dylan ~ >echo "$color0"
#282A23

dylan ~ >echo "$color0 $color5"
#282A23 #BCC3CE

# lemonbar example
lemonbar -B "$color7" -F "$color0"

SCSS variables

wal also exports the colorscheme as SCSS variables for use in webpages. I'm using this feature to update my startpage with the new colors dynamically.

Example:

// Example .scss file

// Import Colors
@import '/home/dylan/.cache/wal/colors.scss';

body {
    background: $color0;
    color: $color7;
}

CSS variables

wal also exports the colors as CSS variables for use with Stylish or userChrome.css.

Example CSS:

/* Import the CSS file.
   NOTE: This must be at line 1 of your stylesheet. */
@import url('file:///home/dylan/.cache/wal/firefox.css')

/* Use the variables */
#nav-bar {
    background-color: var(--color3) !important;
    color: var(--color7) !important;
}

PuTTY

wal also exports the colors so they can be used with PuTTY. After running wal, a file will be created ($HOME/.cache/wal/colors-putty.reg) that can be executed on a Windows machine to create a new PuTTY session with the generated colors. Once the file is executed, you can select Wal from the Saved Sessions list.

Scripting

wal also exports the colors in a plain text format. This is helpful when you want use the plain colors in another script. See the script in contrib/wal2iterm for an example.

The file is called colors and just contains the hex values one per line in the order of 0-15.

Example colors file:

#0C2B32
#9C7648
#B78742
#B4884D
#AC8C64
#D19D62
#61828A
#F0DEC0
#666666
#9C7648
#B78742
#B4884D
#AC8C64
#D19D62
#61828A
#F0DEC0

Example usage in a script:

# Create an array with the plain hex colors ordered 0-15.
c=($(< "${cache_dir}/colors"))

# Remove the leading '#' if needed.
c=("${c[@]//\#}")

Terminal.sexy

You can import wal's colors into Terminal.sexy by copy-pasting the contents of the xcolors file located in the cache directory.