<option type="enum" id="opt/141">
  <!-- A multilingual <comments> block can appear here, too;
       it should be treated as documentation for the user. -->
  <arg_longname>
   <en>Color Mode</en>
  </arg_longname>
  <arg_shortname>
   <en>ColorMode</en><!-- backends only know <en> shortnames! -->
  </arg_shortname>
  <arg_execution>
   <arg_group>General</arg_group>
   <arg_order>120</arg_order>
   <arg_spot>A</arg_spot>
   <arg_substitution />
   <arg_proto> -dColor=%s</arg_proto>
  </arg_execution>
  <constraints>
     <constraint sense="true">
      <driver>md5k</driver>
      <arg_defval>ev/862</arg_defval>
     </constraint>
     <constraint sense="true">
      <driver>md2k</driver>
      <arg_defval>ev/862</arg_defval>
     </constraint>
  </constraints>
  <enum_vals>
   <enum_val id="ev/862">
    <ev_longname>
     <en>Colour</en>
    </ev_longname>
    <!-- A multilingual <comments> block can appear here, too;
         it should be treated as documentation for the user. -->
    <ev_shortname>
     <en>Colour</en>
     <!-- Until someone tells me how to learn the user locale in 
          backends, the shortname must be monolingual in <en>! -->
    </ev_shortname>
    <ev_driverval>true</ev_driverval>
   </enum_val>
   <enum_val id="ev/863">
    <ev_longname>
     <en>Grayscale</en>
    </ev_longname>
    <!-- A multilingual <comments> block can appear here, too;
         it should be treated as documentation for the user. -->
    <ev_shortname>
     <en>Grayscale</en>
     <!-- Until someone tells me how to learn the user locale in 
          backends, the shortname must be monolingual in <en>! -->
    </ev_shortname>
    <ev_driverval>false</ev_driverval>
   </enum_val>
  </enum_vals>
</option>
