Shaded, transparent terminal emulators are pretty. While this is well known by the asthetes who use KDE, and other high-zoot, high-function desktops, I think that it is still true of those who like things a little simpler. I find it quicker to kick the tires of a unicycle. Still, I was looking to see if I could find a terminal emulator that was as fast as rxvt (which I switched to after debian-testing bungled the colours in the standard xterm) but allowed pretty shaded transparency.
I tried aterm, because it had little in the way of dependent libraries, but it didn’t refresh when the backdrop image did, which I found annoying. So, I tried eterm (pronounced, inexplicably, Eterm) and kicked it around for a while. I think I like it, based on this theme:
<Eterm-0.9.2>
begin color
foreground white
background black
cursor #ffff00
cursor_text #880000
pointer white
video normal
end color
begin attributes
geometry 80x56
end attributes
begin imageclasses
path "/usr/share/Eterm/pix/"
begin image
type background
mode trans allow trans auto
state normal
cmod image 100
end image
end imageclasses
begin toggles
map_alert on
visual_bell on
login_shell true
scrollbar off
utmp_logging on
iconic false
home_on_output 1
home_on_input 1
scrollbar_right true
scrollbar_floating false
borderless false
end toggles
begin keyboard
smallfont_key LessThan
bigfont_key GreaterThan
end keyboard
begin misc
save_lines 1024
cut_chars "t`"'&() *,;<=>?@[]{|}"
border_width 0
end misc
It is really simple, but lets me see my pretty backdrop images even when the window is cluttered with terminals. I had to go into my .muttrc to change the “black” to “default”, but that was no hardship.