Irssi's colors that you can use in text formats, hilights, etc. : text text background --------------------------------------------------------------------- %k %K %0 black dark grey black %r %R %1 red bold red red %g %G %2 green bold green green %y %Y %3 yellow bold yellow yellow %b %B %4 blue bold blue blue %m %M %5 magenta bold magenta magenta %p %P magenta (think: purple) %c %C %6 cyan bold cyan cyan %w %W %7 white bold white white %n %N Changes the color to "default color", removing all other coloring and formatting. %N is always the terminal's default color. %n is usually too, except in themes it changes to "previous color", ie. hello = "%Rhello%n" and "%G{hello} world" would print hello in red, and %n would turn back into %G making world green. %F Blinking on/off (think: flash) %U Underline on/off %8 Reverse on/off %9 %_ Bold on/off %: Insert newline %| Marks the indentation position %# Monospace font on/off (useful with lists and GUI) %% A single % In .theme files %n works a bit differently. See default.theme for more information. MIRC colors that you can use when writing text to channel: foreground (fg) background (bg) ------------------------------------------------------- 0 white light gray + blinking fg 1 black black 2 blue blue 3 green green 4 light red red + blinking fg 5 red red 6 magenta (purple) magenta 7 orange orange 8 yellow orange + blinking fg 9 light green green + blinking fg 10 cyan cyan 11 light cyan cyan + blinking fg 12 light blue blue + blinking fg 13 light magenta magenta + blinking fg 14 gray black + blinking fg 15 light gray light gray These colors may differ depending on your terminal. In particular the meaning for background may be the same as for the foreground (bright colors, no blinking), and orange often looks like brown or dark yellow. How to use these colors ('#' means a number as MIRC color code): -b set bold -c#[,#] set foreground and optionally background color -o reset all formats to plain text -v set inverted color mode -_ set underline -7 same as -_ To reset a mode set it again, f.e. 3FOOBAR creates black on green FOO followed by a green on black BAR