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Images in the terminal
I get a lot of comments/questions about how to get w3m-img mode working with neofetch. This wiki page will guide you through setting up neofetch/w3m-img and will try to explain the various quirks of this mode.
Neofetch 2.0.1 changes the default image mode to ascii
from wallpaper
. From 2.0.1 onwards an additional step is required to use image mode.
You can either use the launch option --w3m
(also --w3m /path/to/img
/ --w3m /path/to/dir/
) or you can edit the config file to enable image mode. The option you have to change is called image_backend
, just change this from ascii
to one of the other valid values and image mode will be enabled.
-
w3m-img
- Image rendering in the terminal.
- This is sometimes bundled together with
w3m
. -
Terminology
andiTerm
users don't need to install w3m-img.
-
imagemagick
- Generating thumbnails and cropping the images.
-
A terminal emulator that supports
\033[14t
orxdotool
orxwininfo + xprop
orxwininfo + xdpyinfo
- Getting the terminal window size in pixels so that we can size the image correctly.
The table below lists my testing of various terminal emulators, what works and what doesn't.
Terminal Emulator | w3m-img | Quirks |
---|---|---|
Gnome-terminal | Yes | - Image disappears on window focus and resize |
- Possible issues on Fedora, see #295 | ||
iTerm | N/A | See [1] |
konsole | Yes | |
st | Yes | Image disappears on window focus and resize |
Terminator | Yes | Image disappears on window focus and resize |
Terminology | N/A | See [2] |
Termite | Yes | Highlighting the image makes the highlighted parts disappear |
tilda | No | |
URxvt | Yes | Image disappears on window focus and resize |
Xfce4-terminal | Yes | |
Xterm | Yes |
[1] iTerm doesn't require w3m-img
to display images. Instead it uses a
set of escape sequences built into iTerm.
[2] Terminology doesn't require w3m-img
to display images. Instead it uses
a builtin program called tycat
.
Note: For image mode to work, the w3m-img
column must say yes
and you must have
the dependencies installed.
Neofetch by default will try to use your current wallpaper as the image. If the
wallpaper detection fails we fallback to ascii mode, when that happens you should
try and launch neofetch with --w3m --source path/to/image
or --w3m --source path/to/dir/
.
The list below shows the current wallpaper setters we support.
Linux / BSD
- feh
- nitrogen
- gsettings
Mac OS X / Windows
- Builtin wallpaper setter
If your wallpaper setter isn't listed here and there's an easy way to find where the current wallpaper is stored, open an issue and I'll gladly add support for it.
Once you've installed w3m-img
, imagemagick
, have a terminal emulator that
meets the criteria above and have a working image source, neofetch should
display images correctly.
If neofetch still won't display the images then you should open a new issue on github and provide me with a verbose log.