Remove box around collapsed regions and summaries in Visual Studio - visual-studio-2010

I'm using VS2010 and I'd like to change the font style of regions and/or summaries when they are condensed, primarily to remove the border around these sections as it's becoming distracting when scrolling through the code.
I've looked through the "Fonts and Colors" and other options and couldn't find anything obvious that would let me change it. Is this font customizable and where can it be done if it is?

You can change the font color under Fonts and Colors > Text Editor > Collapsed Text. Not sure if you can remove the border.

Related

Change color of expanded dgml node

In a dgml file, an expanded Node can have the Background color set which changes the background of the border and title bar. The Foreground color sets the color of the title text.
The body currently seems to be filled with a color that depends on the current color theme selected in the Visual Studio options dialog. This means some people end up with white backgrounds and some black. This causes issues, especially when trying to export as xps to print the diagram. A massive block of black ink is a waste of ink!
How can the color of the body of the expanded Node be specified?
No it cannot. It was a "UI design" decision. Filling the entire group background with color conflicted too much with the VS color scheme. For example, a dark theme editor showing tons of White looks ugly, and a light themed VS showing tons of dark colors also looks ugly...sorry.

Why is selected text not clearly identifiable in VS 2015?

I have a problem with the Visual Studio 2015 editor. I changed the background color to black. It is very hard to identify selected text, which becomes a problem while coding.
So I went to Tools/Options/Fonts and Colors and in the settings for Text Editor I changed the choices for the display item Selected Text. The Item foreground option cannot be changed. So I tried to change the Item background option to red. The sample displayed has a bright red background and yellow characters. This is not what I see on my screen: a dark background with a very faint reddish tint and white characters. The background is almost indistinguishable from the editor's overall pitch black background. Choosing other colors instead of red makes things worse: no tint is displayed around the characters.
Is there a way to make selected text clearly identifiable in VS 2015?
This will keep you busy for a while. Consider using readily available color schemes, like Tools > Options > Environment > General > Color theme = Dark. Google "vs2015 dark color theme" for more.

What's the name of the color for the current item in the VS XAML editor?

Ok. I am finding it difficult to visually discern where the current focus of my editor is. The image below shows that I am currently in the bottom PathIcon tag while the top PathIcon tag is highlighted because it is a matching type. The similarity in color has finally driven me crazy.
Does anyone know the correct text-type in the Fonts and Colors dialog of Visual Studio 2015 to change this color? And, look, for all the StackOverflow haters trolling the board, please resist closing this q until there is an answer. Then you can have your fun.
It looks like there are actually two different colors in play here. The grey box on the "<PathIcon" that contains the cursor is "Brace Matching (Rectangle)". The purplish box on the other "PathIcon" looks like it is the background portion of the "Match color", which is installed by the pro power tools.
The latter color won't reset if you change the color in fonts and colors but will be correct for editor instances you open after changing the color.
I think you're looking for Highlight Current Line (Active), which controls the colors of the line your cursor is on.

VisualStudio 2010: Quickly flip between text editor color schemes? (for LCD vs Projector)

In VS2010, I have a customized text editor color scheme that has a black background and light grey text. This is great for me working by myself on an LCD display. However, often I need to plug in to a projector to display code to a group. The black background color scheme does not work well at all on a projector, so I always want to flip back to basically the "default" color scheme.
The only way I know of to do this right now is to export the VS color settings to a backup file, then revert to defaults. When I am done with my group presentation, I can then re-import the previously exported color settings.
Does anyone know of an easier / less manual way of doing this? Like a plugin that lets you flip between text editor color schemes, or simply a macro to do the manual process above?
I found this writeup on how to make a macro and menu items to quickly export/import the fonts and colors: http://jeffhandley.com/archive/2010/03/09/225.aspx

Which option controls the color of this text?

I have applied a color theme called Vibrant Ink (or some modification of it), and since I installed Visual Studio 2010 Pro Power Tools all my statement completion boxes are unreadable.
undreadable http://img139.imageshack.us/img139/7876/undreadable.png.
What setting changes the colors of these boxes? Preferrably, I'd like to change the background color to something darker, but if that's not possible at least I want to change the text color.
Update: I changed the SignatureHelpTooltipBackground setting under Tools->Options...->Environment->Fonts and colors, but this doesn't seem to affect the tooltips when editing JavaScript.
Is there another setting for JS colors, or is this a bug in VS?
The "default" ToolTip style has hard-coded colors that will only be different if you are running in high-contrast mode. Otherwise, it will be the light gray gradient you see in the picture above.
The tooltips in the ProPack for VB/C# files use a custom (configurable) style as you noted above.
Please submit feedback that the default tooltip background color should be configurable. The more customer requests are heard for this issue, the higher the likelihood it will be fixed in a future release:
http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio
I'm not sure it is legal or not, we can always disassemble the code and modify (patch) what we want. In this case, find that gray color in assembly and change it. It shouldn't be hard for someone who knows .NET and hexes well.

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