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How do I change the ~/.vimrc to have the comments in my code italicized?

In my ~/.vimrc file I have:

highlight Comment ctermfg=blue

that makes the comments blue. What do I need to do differently to make them italic?

Keith Pinson
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john-jones
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6 Answers6

53

First and foremost, you should check if you terminal is capable of displaying text in italics. In your terminal type (-e flag makes sure escape codes are interpreted)

echo -e "\e[3m foo \e[23m"

If you see foo then okay, otherwise you need to change terminal (Gnome Terminal and Konsole are good choices).

Then you should help Vim to recognise the kind of terminal you are using, put in you ~/.bashrc:

export TERM="xterm-256color"

Now you can try and see if this is enough, open a new file vim foo.html with the following content

<i>foo</i>

Do you see foo in italic? If no then you need to go a little further, right now Vim doesn't know the escape codes to switch to italic mode, you need to tell it (this is the hardest part, it took me a few years to figure that out).

Put the following two lines in your ~/.vimrc

set t_ZH=^[[3m
set t_ZR=^[[23m

These are the same escape codes we used before in the terminal, be aware that ^[ are not literal characters but represent the escape character, you can insert it in insert mode with CTRL-V followed by ESC (see :help i_CTRL-V)

Now reopen the file we created before foo.html and you should see foo in italic; if you don't then I can't help you any more. Otherwise you are almost done; there is one last step.

Put in you ~/.vimrc file

highlight Comment cterm=italic

after loading any colorscheme.

Gabriele Lana
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46
highlight Comment cterm=italic gui=italic

You'll need a font with an italic set and a terminal capable of displaying italics. Also, if you're using a color scheme other than the default, the above line should come after the color scheme is loaded in your ~/.vimrc so that the color scheme doesn't override it.

The cterm makes it work in the terminal and the gui is for graphical Vim clients.

masukomi
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michaelmichael
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  • why should it be in a special color scheme file? i find it more convenient to have all the customization in one. is there any website where they show how to get this done? – john-jones Aug 16 '10 at 16:07
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    See my edit. It can be in your `~/.vimrc`, but it should come after the color scheme file is loaded, so that the color scheme file doesn't override your customizations. If you're not using a color scheme file (and it sounds like you aren't), don't worry about it. – michaelmichael Aug 16 '10 at 16:12
  • seems italicizing is more trouble than its worth. – john-jones Aug 16 '10 at 16:18
  • @Hermann that's not a trouble at all. It feels quite natural once You get used to it. Many programs are configured with these .*rc files on unix based systems. – Arnis Lapsa Aug 18 '10 at 21:27
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    so where can i find the fonts with an italic set and is my terminal on kubuntu able to display italics? – john-jones Aug 18 '10 at 21:35
  • This doesn't work in an xterm (patch 314), even when the xterm can display italics with `printf %s '\033[3mItalics\n` (tried it with a TrueType font). It appears to be a limitation in vim, or some other configuration issue. – Jens Dec 29 '14 at 22:12
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    I switched from vim to neovim and italics stopped working. Adding `gui=italic` solved the problem for me, even though I am running nvim inside a terminal. – Git.Coach Feb 03 '20 at 20:37
  • @Git.Coach How did you manage to set the italic font for comments in the Novim? – 71GA Apr 08 '22 at 08:03
  • This doesn't work for me without also overwriting the escape codes from the other comments. – redreceipt Oct 27 '22 at 16:58
28

In my case I had to put this in my vimrc file:

let &t_ZH="\e[3m"
let &t_ZR="\e[23m"
highlight Comment cterm=italic

Notice it is not the same as:

set t_ZH=^[[3m
set t_ZR=^[[23m
highlight Comment cterm=italic

The former worked for me, while the latter didn't.

Peque
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8

for GUI environments like gvim, a simple

highlight Comment gui=italic

does it.

thet
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    This worked for me and I'm not using a GUI environment. Not sure if using a 4k monitor be related – Ignacio Jun 28 '17 at 05:53
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michaelmichael's answer should solve it for most cases. But, just in case you need this for a font in gvim that doesn't have italics (but oblique or something instead), you can try something like this in ~/.gvimrc

highlight Comment font=Bitstream_Vera_Sans_Mono_Oblique:h14

where h14 is the font size. This font should have the same cell size as your normal font though, so don't use an altogether different font.

Zubin
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0

Because I'm using the Solarized colorscheme, I had to edit .vim/colors/solarized.vim as recommended in Solarized #120 to replace lines 137-157 with the following:

if has("gui_running") || ( has("unix") && system("tput sitm") == "\033[3m" )
    let s:terminal_italic=1
else
    let s:terminal_italic=0
endif

That was in addition following the instructions in this Gist and adding these two lines to my .vimrc, using Ctrl-vEsc to enter ^[:

set t_ZH=^[[3m
set t_ZR=^[[23m

(Thanks to Gabriele Lana for the tip to add those lines to my .vimrc.)

mefryar
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