Small fix

This commit is contained in:
Dr-Noob
2020-09-01 20:48:37 +02:00
parent ae752bac77
commit 60bc02185d

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@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
# cpufetch
Prints a fancy summary of the CPU with some advanced information
![Example](i9.png)
![cpu1](i9.png)
### Platforms
cpufetch currently supports x86 CPUs (both Intel and AMD CPUs)
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ cpufetch currently supports x86 CPUs (both Intel and AMD CPUs)
| Platform | Intel | AMD | Notes |
|:---------:|:-------------------------:|:------------------------:|:-----------------:|
| Linux | :heavy_check_mark: | :heavy_check_mark: | Prefered platform |
| Windows | :heavy_check_mark: | :heavy_check_mark: | Some information may be missing. No colors and worse CPU art |
| Windows | :heavy_check_mark: | :heavy_check_mark: | Some information may be missing. <br> No colors and worse CPU art |
| macOS | :heavy_exclamation_mark: | :heavy_exclamation_mark: | Untested |
@@ -38,9 +38,9 @@ The Makefile is designed to work on both Linux and Windows.
Here are more examples of how `cpufetch` looks on different CPUs.
![Example](epyc.png)
![cpu2](epyc.png)
![Example](cascade_lake.png)
![cpu3](cascade_lake.png)
### Colors and style
By default, `cpufetch` will print the CPU art with the system colorscheme. However, you can always set a custom color scheme, either