| ▲ | tczMUFlmoNk 8 hours ago | |
Red/green has no inherent semantics. It has the semantics that you assign it. If you choose to assign it meaning that disenfranchises 8% of men using your system, that's your choice, but it is not a good one. | ||
| ▲ | mrob 8 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
The standard terminal palette is only 16 colors. Even if you compress them all into the green-to-blue color range, it's still possible to distinguish all 16. The user can change "red" and "green" to whatever they like in the terminal preferences and then every 16-color app will be accessible with no additional effort from anybody. | ||
| ▲ | skydhash 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Cultural semantics (diff tools, build tools,…: green/addition/ok, red/removal/error). And people with color blindness can alter the colors to something they can differentiate. And in the ansi sequences, they are actually numbers. | ||