I generally only use dark themes for coding, so it's really annoying that Sublime Text 3's sidebar stays light themed whatever theme you apply.
Does anyone know how to change this?
My configuration: Mac OSX 10.10.1 Yosemite, Sublime Text 3 Stable Channel, Build 3065
You are looking for a Sublime UI Theme, which modifies Sublime's User Interface (e.g.: side bar). It's different from a Color Theme/Scheme, which modifies only the code part of Sublime's window. I tested a lot of UI Themes and the one I liked the most was Theme - Soda. You can install it using Sublime's Package Control. To enable it, go to Preferences >> Settings - User and add this line:
"theme": "Soda Dark 3.sublime-theme",
Here is a printscreen of my Sublime Text 3 with Soda Dark UI Theme and Twilight default Color Scheme:
The most recent version of Sublime has fixed this issue, click on Preferences, click on Theme select Adaptive.sublime-theme. This will change the sidebar to a dark colored background.
You can manually change the sidebar style by editing Default.sublime-theme.
To do this, edit the “sidebar_tree”, “sidebar_heading” etc., classes in Packages/Theme - Default/Default.sublime-theme. You can override those defaults by putting this Default.sublime-theme inside the Packages/User folder.
From the Sublime Text menu, selecting “Preferences → Browse Packages…” will take you to it.
You need to restart Sublime completely in order for a theme to fully take effect. Just changing and saving Preferences.sublime-settings or using a theme-changing plugin won't do it. You need to use ⌘Q or Sublime Text -> Quit, not just close the window by clicking the red dot.
I thought I would put a note here that explains a basic misconception for a lot of people who are using these Text Editors... Sublime Text in particular (or at least that's the one I use, so I don't know how it works for other editors):
There are "Themes" and there are "Color Schemes". They are similar but affect different things. "Themes" actively change the entire UI, and can include a Color Scheme if you set it up that way. This typically includes the sidebar, and can also include options for the file tabs, and some even include icons for the sidebar as well. And then we have "Color Schemes" which only change the coding windows and nothing else... not the Sidebar, nor the File tabs, etc.
The confusion happens because some people call Color Schemes "Themes" which makes folks think that their "Theme" is going to change everything.... when technically, it's just a color scheme.
And an additional note: Themes don't automatically install for all users. When I install a Theme, I have to open my User preferences (under "preferences > Settings - User"), and then you have to add the line which says something like:
"theme": "Theme-Name.sublime-theme"
(where "Theme-Name" is the name of your theme).
This is different than just activating a color scheme. If you've chosen a color scheme via the dropdown menus in Sublime Text, you will see a line in there like this:
"color_scheme": "Packages/Color-Scheme-Name.tmTheme"
(where "Color-Scheme-Name" is the name of your color scheme).
Here's the short version:
.sublime-theme files change the look of the UI including the Sidebar and File Tabs.
Defining these are a tremendous pain, so save yourself a lot of time and install the Theme Menu Switcher package.
Update: Sublime Text 3 has fundamentally changed the way Color Schemes and Themes work, and has broken many of the packages that were built to handle them. I can no longer confirm the accuracy of this post, nor the functionality of the packages mentioned herein because the Sublime developers have not fully explained the changes to the customization system nor addressed how to fix them. And, at the very best, they are far more difficult to change.
At this point, this post should only be used as a reference to the differences between "themes" and "color schemes" in Sublime Text 2, as I myself have yet to successfully change a theme nor color scheme in Sublime Text 3.
I will update this post as I can dedicate more time to unraveling this Sublime Customization Quagmire.
Here's the long version:
Figure 1: The difference between "Color Schemes" and "Themes" - In the Sublime Community these terms are often confused and used interchangeably.
Changing the look of Sublime is a relatively difficult endeavor, for three main reasons:
Poorly chosen terminology
Misinformation in the Sublime Community
Installation Nightmare
Terminology
There are 2 different sections of Sublime that can be customized:
the editable region (the purple regions)
the User Interface (the green regions)
These use two different file types, and they do not accurately reflect the terminology.
The "Why?" of this decision is compatibility, and for brevity's sake I won't get into it here, but the fallout of this effort is:
The file type called tmTheme does not affect the theme, it affects the Color Scheme.
Color Schemes (highlighted in purple)
affect the look of the editable region (more specifically, the editable characters, ie what color they are when highlighted or not highlighted, etc).
relatively easy to produce
Color Schemes are Mistakenly called "Themes" all over the Sublime Community.
Themes (highlighted in green)
.sublime-theme files change the Theme, or the UI aspects of Sublime.
difficult to produce
It is difficult to find true Sublime Themes, compared to "Color Schemes"
Misinformation
Many packages claim to change the Theme, but actually change the Color Scheme. This is usually because the people producing them don't know that "Theme" specifically refers to the UI.
So another level of difficulty is finding a true "Theme" package, rather than Color Scheme.
Even some legit websites do not correctly make a distinction between the two, which adds to the challenges. For instance, colorsublime.com has a tutorial on changing the sublime "theme", but actually references the "Color Scheme" file type (.tmTheme).
Installation Pains
Themes and Color Schemes are hard to install and define. In fact, it's shocking how difficult the process is. The difficulty is further exacerbated with a fundamental change in installation and definition requirements in Sublime Text 3 that are not fully explained, which breaks many of the packages we once were reliant upon to change the Themes and Color Schemes.
It requires installing an actual Theme package (good luck finding one by browsing Packages in Package Control), defining it in settings, and then restarting Sublime. And, if you did something wrong, Sublime will simply replace your user-defined theme setting with the default. Yes, you heard me right, without notice or error message, Sublime will overwrite your theme definition.
But with Themes Menu Switcher All you need to do is go to Preferences > Theme and you'll see a list of all themes you have installed. You can also easily switch between themes without restarting Sublime.
Here's a sample from the website:
I have no affiliation with Theme Menu Switcher at all, I'm just a fan.
Again, Theme Menu Switcher does not work the same in Sublime Text 3. If you need to have a customized look, I recommend not to update to Sublime Text 3.
I first thought I was using SBT 3, then realized I was using version 2 still....
I finally got the sidebar to be dark on Windows!
I noticed that when I had my user settings theme set to "Soda Dark 3.sublime-theme" it would half-way work but you could not see the folder structure. So I decided to try the other option in the Theme - Soda folder without the "3" and it worked right away. This should work below in your Preferences > Settings - User file.
{
"theme": "Soda Dark.sublime-theme",
"color_scheme": "Packages/Color Scheme - Default/Monokai.tmTheme"
}
To Sidebar ceased to be white:
Download default theme because it is not in the folder sublime link here by default.sublime-Theme
In sublime 3 preferences -- > > Browse package
create a folder called "default theme" and put the downloaded file
if you installed the theme setUI, setUI file.sublime-the theme is looking for the line with comment:
"// sidebar || BG of selected files"
and under it a string
"layer0. opacity: { "target": 0.0, "speed": 50.0, "interpolation": "smoothstep" }
replaceable target": 0.0 --> target": 1.0
setting color_scheme only sets the code pallet,
setting theme sets the whole ST3 theme to the one you specify:
{
"theme": "Nil.sublime-theme",
"color_scheme": "Packages/Theme - Nil/Big Duo.tmTheme"
...
}
One simple way to do this is :
Go to Preferences -> Package Settings -> Your Theme Name -> Activation
In my case I installed Boxy Theme so the path will be
Preferences -> Package Settings -> Boxy Theme -> Activation
Then there will be a pop-up menu that will let you choose which type of the theme package you want to activate.
Use up and down arrow so choose then press enter or simply click the one you want to choose.
This is steps only applicable if the theme installed also customized the sublime text 3 sidebar.
Hope it help anyone!
The best way to enhance your experience and change the sidebar and theme of the sublime text UI is to install two packages to control it:
Install a theme that has UI inside its package (I use Agila Theme [dracula] )
Install Themes Menu Switcher package
After you've installed those two, just change the color scheme (text editor)
and then with the Theme Menu Switcher you'll switch to whatever UI you use.
Remember:
It's required that the theme you install to have UI inside the package.
Just install package SyncedSidebarBg:it will change the sidebar theme based on current color scheme.But it seems that every time you change the color scheme,sidebar will be changed after you open file Preferences.sublime-settings
In Material theme 3.1.4 you can change theme like this: Tools->Metherial Theme->Material Theme Config. Its very easy.
I had the same problem.
Just set the theme in Preferences -> Settings – User by editing the json property called.
{
// Default theme
"theme": "Material-Theme.sublime-theme",
"color_scheme": "Packages/Material Theme/schemes/Material-Theme.tmTheme"
}
For Material theme that I use.
It worked for me.
Related
I've found a Visual Studio (2019) theme I like within the Visual Studio Color Theme editor, but I really want to import only the fonts and colors for the text editor, and not all of the customizations for the rest of the Visual Studio environment.
It appears there is no native support within the color editor to export only certain theme attributes when copying a theme to modify. Also, when customizing a theme, it is possible to select multiple individual UI elements, but no way to then restore them to default such that the theme only contains the Text Editor changes.
I tried loading the theme that has the desired text editor colors, then Tools->Export Settings and then only select "Fonts and Colors", but now this also exports the UI customizations rather than just the text editor colors. Right now, the only way I can see to do this is to create a new theme from the stock dark theme, then manually copy each text editor color from the desired theme to the new one...I'm really trying to avoid this, as there are literally dozens and dozens of text editor colors and this would take a very long time.
I also tried exporting the theme, editing the .vstheme file and removing everything except the Text Editor colors, but Visual Studio throws an exception upon import--presumably all of the elements are required to be defined with the XML.
Thanks for any ideas you can come up with!
Okay, I managed to get this figured out in what I believe is the easiest way possible. The update to my question where I exported the .vstheme file to modify manually was definitely the right path. Basically, I exported the theme that contained the current environment colors that I want to keep. I also exported the theme with the text editor colors I want to apply. I then simply replaced the 3 sections for text editor color settings in the "old" theme file with the new color settings from the "new" file. (Collapsing the XML code down to the 3rd level helped a LOT, as there are almost 10,000 lines.)
After this, I simply imported the modified file and voila—only the editor colors are applied.
My visual studios seems to have just randomly broken.
The text editor does not seem to change colors at all upon the theme being changed.
for example, if the theme is dark the surrounding windows will all format to the correct color but the editor itself remains the "light" theme. It doesn't even respond to the blue theme.
I can manually edit the colors, but that seems to be all I can do right now.
I just had this problem where no matter which theme I selected the text editor would be light as you say.
I resolved this by going to Tools > Options > Environment > Fonts and Colors and with Text Editor selected in the top drop down I clicked Use Defaults and that switched it back to being of the theme which you selected in General.
I have a Colors & Fonts theme I pulled in from daylerees. I imported the theme in to my ~/.WebIde90/config/colors/ folder. As seen in the screenshot below, I am using Color IDE which changes my Project navigation to the same color.
My problem is I can't get my top menu bar (ie: the one containing File, Edit, etc.) to change to the same color theme. I opened up my settings, and under Appearance & Behavior > Appearance, there is no matching theme under the UI Options. My only options are Alloy, Darkula, GTK and Intellij.
Is there any way to change the UI Theme to match the Colors and Fonts theme?
There is no customisation interface of any kind for GUI themes (also known as Look & Feel in Java Swing applications).
Basically -- everything is inside the theme. If you want to change it -- you will have to make your own (which is not an easy task as you need to make sure it will work OK in IDEA products, which may have some specifics) or hack the existing one (just changing colors should not be hard). This is actually one of the reasons why such plugins like "Color IDE" exists in first place.
You can change interface fonts at Settings/Preferences | Appearance & Behavior | Appearance | Override default fonts by.
I may suggest you to look at custom (modified Darcula) dark GUI & Editor themes at https://github.com/ChrisRM/material-theme-jetbrains . Please note that latest EAP builds (PhpStorm v10) are not fully supported yet -- only stable versions ATM (which is v9 for PhpStorm).
I have seen in many places that some the UI design of some people's Sublime Text editor looks like this. Mine looks like this.
How would I change my UI to look like what other people have?
Install Package Control.
Search for themes.
Install theme(s) of interest.
Edit preferences (Preferences -> Settings-User) and alter "theme" key to name of .sublime-theme file of interest (read theme's documentation on Package Control for information). Save file.
Restart Sublime (necessary) for theme to take full effect.
I like the Oblivion theme from Eclipse.
Is there a similar theme for Xcode?
You do have the option of some themes in the preferences inside Xcode.
There are default ones and you can create your own. The colors and fonts are completely customizable and you can use the black background. You can then save and name it somehow.
I don't think that you're able to import some though...
just go in Xcode --> Preferences --> Fonts & Colors and select the Dusk theme. It's very similar but you can also modify its colors as you wish.
Or you can visit the collection of custom themes by hdoria and choose one! Instructions are at the bottom page ;)