Provided by: kitty_0.32.2-1ubuntu0.4_amd64 bug

Name

       kitten-@-set-background-opacity - Set the background opacity

Usage

       kitten @ set-background-opacity  OPACITY

Description

       Set  the  background  opacity  for  the  specified  windows.  This  will  only work if you have turned on
       dynamic_background_opacity in kitty.conf. The background opacity affects all kitty windows in a single OS
       window. For example::

           kitten @ set-background-opacity 0.5

Options

       --all, -a
              By default, background opacity are only changed for the currently active OS  window.  This  option
              will cause background opacity to be changed in all windows.

       --toggle
              When  specified, the background opacity for the matching OS windows will be reset to default if it
              is currently equal to the specified value, otherwise it will be set to the specified value.

       --match, -m
              The window to match. Match specifications are of the form: field:query. Where field can be one of:
              id, title, pid, cwd, cmdline, num, env, var, state, neighbor, and recent. query is the  expression
              to  match.  Expressions  can be either a number or a regular expression, and can be combined using
              Boolean operators.

              The special value all matches all windows.

              For numeric fields: id, pid, num and recent, the expression is interpreted  as  a  number,  not  a
              regular  expression.  Negative values for id match from the highest id number down, in particular,
              -1 is the most recently created window.

              The field num refers to the window position in the current tab, starting from  zero  and  counting
              clockwise  (this  is  the  same  as the order in which the windows are reported by the kitten @ ls
              command).

              The window id of the current window is available as the KITTY_WINDOW_ID environment variable.

              The field recent refers to recently active windows in the currently active tab,  with  zero  being
              the currently active window, one being the previously active window and so on.

              The field neighbor refers to a neighbor of the active window in the specified direction, which can
              be: left, right, top or bottom.

              When  using  the env field to match on environment variables, you can specify only the environment
              variable name or a name and value, for example, env:MY_ENV_VAR=2.

              Similarly, the var field matches on user variables set on the window. You can specify name or name
              and value as with the env field.

              The field state matches on the state  of  the  window.  Supported  states  are:  active,  focused,
              needs_attention,  parent_active,  parent_focused,  self,  overlay_parent.   Active windows are the
              windows that are active in their parent tab. There is only one focused window and it is the window
              to which keyboard events are delivered. If no window  is  focused,  the  last  focused  window  is
              matched.  The  value self matches the window in which the remote control command is run. The value
              overlay_parent matches the window that is under the self  window,  when  the  self  window  is  an
              overlay.

              Note that you can use the kitten @ ls command to get a list of windows.

       --match-tab, -t
              The  tab  to  match. Match specifications are of the form: field:query. Where field can be one of:
              id, index, title, window_id, window_title, pid, cwd, cmdline env, var, state and recent. query  is
              the  expression  to  match. Expressions can be either a number or a regular expression, and can be
              combined using Boolean operators.

              The special value all matches all tabs.

              For numeric fields: id, index, window_id, pid and recent,  the  expression  is  interpreted  as  a
              number,  not  a  regular  expression.  Negative  values for id/window_id match from the highest id
              number down, in particular, -1 is the most recently created tab/window.

              When using title or id, first a matching tab is looked for, and if not found a matching window  is
              looked for, and the tab for that window is used.

              You  can  also  use  window_id and window_title to match the tab that contains the window with the
              specified id or title.

              The index number is used to match the nth tab in the currently active OS window. The recent number
              matches recently active tabs in the currently active OS window,  with  zero  being  the  currently
              active tab, one the previously active tab and so on.

              When  using  the env field to match on environment variables, you can specify only the environment
              variable name or a name and value, for example, env:MY_ENV_VAR=2. Tabs containing any window  with
              the specified environment variables are matched. Similarly, var matches tabs containing any window
              with the specified user variable.

              The  field  state  matches  on  the  state  of  the  tab.  Supported  states are: active, focused,
              needs_attention, parent_active and parent_focused. Active tabs are the tabs  that  are  active  in
              their  parent  OS window. There is only one focused tab and it is the tab to which keyboard events
              are delivered. If no tab is focused, the last focused tab is matched.

              Note that you can use the kitten @ ls command to get a list of tabs.

       --help, -h
              Show help for this command

Global options

       --to   An address for the kitty instance to control. Corresponds  to  the  address  given  to  the  kitty
              instance  via the --listen-on option or the listen_on setting in kitty.conf. If not specified, the
              environment variable KITTY_LISTEN_ON is checked. If that is also not found, messages are  sent  to
              the  controlling terminal for this process, i.e. they will only work if this process is run within
              a kitty window.

       --password
              A password to use when contacting kitty. This will cause kitty to ask the user for  permission  to
              perform the specified action, unless the password has been accepted before or is pre-configured in
              kitty.conf.

       --password-file [=rc-pass]
              A  file  from  which  to  read  the  password.  Trailing whitespace is ignored. Relative paths are
              resolved from the kitty configuration directory. Use - to read from STDIN. Used if  no  --password
              is supplied. Defaults to checking for the rc-pass file in the kitty configuration directory.

       --password-env [=KITTY_RC_PASSWORD]
              The  name  of  an  environment  variable  to read the password from. Used if no --password-file is
              supplied. Defaults to checking the environment variable KITTY_RC_PASSWORD.

       --use-password [=if-available]
              If no password is available, kitty will usually just send the remote  control  command  without  a
              password. This option can be used to force it to always or never use the supplied password.

              Choices: if-available, always, never

0.32.2                                            Jun 25, 2025                kitten-@-set-background-opacity(1)