 Alright, what's up everyone? So this video I think is gonna be a little short, but it's gonna be a good one it's gonna be a good one because This is a tool that I've been I've only recently really used, but it I've gotten so much out of it So you might notice if you're familiar with my other videos My color scheme is a lot different than what it usually is And that's because I found a pretty effective tool at let me turn this music off. It's blurring in my headphones I'm just gonna be talking loud if it's going on. Anyway, I found a pretty effective tool for auto-generating color schemes And you'll see that there's a loose comparison between my background and the actual color scheme I have Now I actually a couple months ago I was talking to a subscriber about like the pains of like getting a cohesive color scheme across all your different programs So, you know your terminal or Vim or all this other stuff And one of this subscriber, I think his name was Louie, right? This is from months ago He might not even remember but he directed me to this little thing called pie wall, which I didn't check out at the time I just sort of looked at it, but I pulled it back up a couple days ago, and it's actually pretty sweet So this is written by Dylan Dylan Erups Erups I don't know how he pronounces that I think that's the guy who made Neofetch But this program is actually pretty simple It's a little script and what you do is you feed it any kind of like picture and it uses image magic to Take all the core colors out of it So like you can get it produces basically I think a 16 color palette from that image Then it puts it as your background and it It enforces that color scheme in all of your programs or whatever So I actually have a couple examples here. So here's the background we have here Now to actually run this actually look I should probably do it manually first So to actually run this thing you just type wall and then I and then the name of a file So I'll put in this one here So yeah, I can't really type today and once you run that it generates a color scheme from that sets it as the background and And you'll see that all of our terminals now have changed to match this background and it actually looks really nice It does a good job at it So I when I when I first started using this a day or so ago, man I just could not stop playing with it like I was just going through every single like You know picture in my wallpaper folder like seeing how this thing would actually work Now here's the thing So far as I know you don't really have to do any configuration depending on your setup So I have urx vt and this thing works automatically with it You do there is I think a special Vim color scheme. Let me check it out You can check out the documentation over here. It shows you if you go to where is it? Customization or something it tells you all the different packages it works with So for Vim you have to set a special color scheme the wall color scheme or whatever So knowing me I don't want to have to type this in the terminal every time So I've set it to a shortcut and ranger so I can just go over one of these and press BW That's how I have it configured and it'll just do it automatically look at that Oh my god every single time. It's just beautiful. Just beautiful So you can it works pretty much on any image so long as it has enough colors I mean if you're working with something that's pretty monochromatic, you're gonna have some trouble But otherwise man just every single time. It's just a great color scheme So again, it works on your XVT out of the box. I can't vouch for any other terminals but this is like the perfect kind of program because Man it does so much that I used to do manually and now I don't even have to think about it So yeah, this thing's pretty great So yeah, the link in the description check this thing out There are other things you can do with it You can override colors and stuff like that if you want to have some other changes But all in all this thing is just fantastic. So pie wall