What is the difference between xterm-color & xterm-256color?

user12345 picture user12345 · Apr 4, 2012 · Viewed 37.3k times · Source

I've come across both xterm-color and xterm-256color as options when trying to set up my terminal program to use color - i.e. you can set your TERM environment variable to either one.

I was wondering if anyone can describe the difference between the two?

I've searched for documentation on my Ubuntu server as well as my mac but haven't found any. I've only been able to find various binary files in /usr/share/terminfo.

Answer

Chris Page picture Chris Page · Apr 6, 2012

xterm-256color describes Xterm with support for 256 colors enabled. xterm-color describes an older branch of Xterm that supports eight colors. xterm-color is not recommended, since it describes a variant of Xterm that’s less functional and that you’re not likely to be using. Usually you’ll want to use xterm, xterm-16color or xterm-256color.

In particular, xterm-256color is the default for Terminal starting with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, with the next-best recommended values being xterm-16color or xterm (which only describes support for eight ANSI colors). Prior to 10.7, xterm-color was the default because Terminal didn’t support some critical features described by the recommended Xterm terminfo values, e.g., Background Color Erase (BCE), modern codes for switching main/alternate screens, 256 colors.

Sometimes people explicitly set TERM to xterm-color (as opposed to the recommended Xterm values) to disable functionality or work around incompatibilities between the available terminfo values on a particular computer and the terminal emulator being used.

Note that technically Terminal should have its own up-to-date terminfo values that describe exactly which features it supports, instead of using the values for Xterm, but:

  1. There isn’t one that’s up to date currently. nsterm represents Terminal’s ancestor from NeXTSTEP. Someone apparently has updated nsterm recently (sometime in the past couple of years), but I don’t know whether that has made its way into the ncurses distribution, and it may not be completely up to date with Terminal in 10.7.
  2. A number of programs and shell customization scripts explicitly check whether $TERM starts with (or is equal to) xterm. So some users would still need to know about using the recommended Xterm values with Terminal for compatibility with those.

If you’re not familiar with the terminfo system, take a look at the x-man-page://5/terminfo man page. Also, you can use the infocmp command to view the current terminfo settings or compare two different ones, e.g., infocmp xterm-color xterm-256color will show you all the differences between those two.