- colors using standard RGB values. This mode will be able to support displaying
- any colorscheme, but it should be noted that the user-configured 16-color palette
- is ignored when using true-color mode (this means the colors while using the
- terminal emulator will be slightly off). Not all terminals support true color
- but at this point most do. True color support in micro is off by default but
- can be enabled by setting the environment variable `MICRO_TRUECOLOR` to 1.
- In addition your terminal must support it (usually indicated by setting `$COLORTERM`
- to `truecolor`).
- True-color colorschemes in micro typically end with `-tc`, such as `solarized-tc`,
- `atom-dark-tc`, `material-tc`, etc... If true color is not enabled but a true
- color colorscheme is used, micro will do its best to approximate the colors
- to the available 256 colors.
+ colors using standard RGB values. This mode will be able to support
+ displaying any colorscheme, but it should be noted that the user-configured
+ 16-color palette is ignored when using true-color mode (this means the
+ colors while using the terminal emulator will be slightly off). Not all
+ terminals support true color but at this point most do. True color
+ support in micro is off by default but can be enabled by setting the
+ environment variable `MICRO_TRUECOLOR` to 1. In addition your terminal
+ must support it (usually indicated by setting `$COLORTERM` to `truecolor`).
+ True-color colorschemes in micro typically end with `-tc`, such as
+ `solarized-tc`, `atom-dark-tc`, `material-tc`, etc... If true color is not
+ enabled but a true color colorscheme is used, micro will do its best to
+ approximate the colors to the available 256 colors.