> This suggests that the resources that are loaded into your X server > by default contain settings with a higher priority than your own > .Xresources. The xrdb -merge merges your settings, but leaves the > higher priority resources there as well, so your settings seem to have > no effect. The xrdb -load throws away all settings including the higher > priority ones, thus letting your settings take effect. > > Use the appres tool to find out what the actual settings are that are > loaded in your X server. If this confirms the theory, you can start > finding out where the higher priority settings come from.
Hi! appres tool gives me this output, and these are the same values that are in my current .Xresources! Any pointers? -- *color8: #505354 *color14: #899ca1 *color9: #ff5995 *background: #1b1d1e *color15: #f8f8f2 *color2: #82b414 *color0: #1b1d1e *customization: -color *color3: #fd971f *color1: #f92672 *foreground: #a0a0a0 *color4: #56c2d6 *color10: #b6e354 *color5: #8c54fe *color11: #feed6c *color6: #465457 *color12: #8cedff *color7: #ccccc6 *color13: #9e6ffe Regards, Anubhav Yadav Imperial College of Engineering and Research, Pune. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/ca+jf9af5zy7zlt3iiwr8wk9o9b9f6pgyyp_vjzwvbskzcca...@mail.gmail.com