The Windows console is getting a new, easier to read color scheme

“Even with this work, the Windows console is still weak compared to its counterparts in macOS and Linux. In Windows, the operating systems-supplied console windows are closely tied to the command-line applications that use them; it's impossible to create a command-line application that isn't attached to a Windows console window. Linux and macOS offer a separation between the software that's displaying the console apps and the console apps themselves. Those operating systems have a built-in default console, but unlike Windows, they don't have to use it; third-party software can fill the same role. “Attractive, modern terminal applications like iTerm on macOS and Unix stalwarts such as screen (which enables multiple command-line shells to share a single console window) take advantage of this extensibility. Neither kind of application can be readily developed for command-line apps on Windows, and while people have tried to work around Windows' limitations (for example, by hiding the Windows built-in console windows off-screen somewhere), the results are imperfect. We're told that there are plans in store to finally address this weakness of Windows, though what the solution will be is at present unknown.” <https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2017/08/the-windows-console-is-getting-a-new-easier-to-read-color-scheme/>
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Lawrence D'Oliveiro