![]() ![]() The right idea is to use proper white balance to match the light color, to get good color results in various lighting. But the camera has no such brain to correct it. ![]() It puzzles us because our human brain knows what it should look like and automatically adjusts what we think we saw. Those lights are simply different colors. See? Actually do this, and then you will actually understand White Balance. Take another picture indoors in incandescent light using Daylight white balance (will be very orange). Best try to see this is to take a picture outside in sunshine using Incandescent white balance (it will be very blue). If not familiar with white balance, then to understand the problem, start by simply taking two JPG pictures using intentionally wrong white balance. The dircolors documentation is the place to go.(The fix begins at mid-page below if you want to skip some standard overhead basics stuff.) There is a lot here, two long pages. To get rid of the background, you can either change the directory permissions, or use a different database to set your LS_COLORS environment variable. Our my $fh, "dircolors -p|" or die "cannot read from = Of course dircolors doesn't color its output. The explanation is given in the output of dircolors -p, e.g., bashrc using vivid command that generates necessary colour codes based on themeĮxport LS_COLORS="$(vivid generate molokai)"īoth these tool colour schemes don't have background colour for directories of any kind. bashrcĮcho 'eval $(dircolors -b "$HOME/.config/dircolors")' > $HOME/.bashrc
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