Is Eclipse at all theme-able? I would like to install a dark color scheme for it, since I much prefer white text on dark background than the other way around.
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24This is one of quite a long list of basic omissions that make it hard to take Eclipse seriously.– DraemonJun 5, 2010 at 10:48
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11There is now an easy way to do it: marketplace.eclipse.org/content/eclipse-color-theme– Thomas Ferris NicolaisenJan 26, 2011 at 8:14
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14@ThomasFerrisNicolaisen: This plugin only changes the source window, NOT the other windows, which still blind you with their white backgrounds.– SMBiggsJun 11, 2012 at 5:36
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4@Uri: This solution on the macintosh also inverts the colors of the icons, which can be very confusing (like changing "debug - STOP" to the color green and "debug - GO" to red). Also, it can make debugging impossible if you're doing any graphics work as all that stuff is reversed as well. Lastly, there's simply NO WAY to change the default windows color on a mac. Guess the Eclipse dev team must be mac nuts, as they follow that idiotic lead.– SMBiggsJun 11, 2012 at 5:40
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5A fully dark theme is now available with Eclipse 4.2 (Juno)! See github.com/eclipse-color-theme/eclipse-color-theme and stackoverflow.com/questions/5053834/…– ignisNov 3, 2012 at 20:19
19 Answers
As posted to a few related questions already, I'm working on a plugin for easy, cross-editor color theme management:
http://marketplace.eclipse.org/content/eclipse-color-theme
It is still work in progress, but already supports many editors and a few dark color themes.
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17Is there any way of changing the color of the other views (such as projekt explorer, console, problems, etc.), too?– BruiserMay 26, 2011 at 19:15
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88The problem with this is obvious - while you can turn editor theme to "dark", the rest of Eclipse shines white incredibly bright, so it's even worse :(– Ivan G.Jun 8, 2011 at 23:21
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1This works (apparently) in MyEclipse 6.6 (don't ask, I was forced I don't like it one bit) will do further testing and post back in case anything breaks. Jan 9, 2012 at 17:28
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2I can't stand the lack of themeable windows in Eclipse. Aptana, which is basically a clone of Eclipse, themes EVERYTHING. This is why I use it for everything not Android SDK related...even as my word processor (but that's not recommended.)– o_OAug 16, 2012 at 18:59
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1For Linux users, make Eclipse look beautiful in a dark theme by following my tips in Q&A here: stackoverflow.com/questions/12238773/… Sep 2, 2012 at 20:06
I've created my own dark color scheme (based on Oblivion from gedit), which I think is very nice to work with.
Preview & details at: http://www.rogerdudler.com/?p=362
We're happy to announce the beta of eclipsecolorthemes.org, a new website to download, create and maintain Eclipse color themes / schemes. The theme editor allows you to copy an existing theme and edit the colors with a live preview of your changes on specific editors. The downloadable themes support a lot of editors (PHP, Java, SQL, Ant, text, HTML, CSS, and more to follow)
There's a growing list of themes already available on the site:
You can read more about the launch here.
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2I love Oblivion in gedit, and your instructions were just what I wanted. A+– defrexJul 11, 2010 at 15:37
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1These are awesome, but when I try to compare changes, the changes are highlighted in a dark color so I can't see them. I usually end up having to change colorthemes just to compare changes in files.– User1Nov 13, 2011 at 14:38
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2Don't work on all the other windows, which now BLAST with their white backgrounds by comparison.– SMBiggsJun 11, 2012 at 5:43
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2
Here's a guy that posted his Eclipse preferences for changing the colors like a theme:
http://blog.codefront.net/2006/09/28/vibrant-ink-textmate-theme-for-eclipse/
And here's more about how to set the colors in the Ganymede Eclipse version (v. 3.4, mid 2008):
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4I posted up blog.codefront.net/2006/09/28/… way back in 2006 and while some people have had success with it, I think it doesn't quite work for recent versions of Eclipse (some readers have emailed me). YMMV!– Chu YeowJan 23, 2009 at 1:49
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Mark Occurences can be reenabled if you are missing it (as I was) by going to Prefs -> General -> Editors -> Text Editors -> Annotations -> Occurrences and enabling "Text as Highlighted" Feb 15, 2010 at 11:25
For Linux users, assuming you run a compositing window manager (Compiz), you can just turn the window negative. I use Eclipse like this all the time, the normal (whitie) looks is blowing my eyes off.
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nice one. I actually tuned eclipse pretty well by now using all the links in the answers. But I also use a dark colorscheme in KDE... May 6, 2010 at 20:27
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found it, "Negative" plugin, I must say it looks much better on my dark linux theme– Ivan G.Jun 8, 2011 at 23:18
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thanks but still the completion window is white and each time that it is shown it hits my eyes. Sep 9, 2011 at 6:44
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1very nice idea, simple and effective, thanks! enable it though compizconfig-settings-manager (ccsm), note that rules ran be set (type=Eclipse) there to automatically apply the 'negative' effect. it should also be possible to set a rule for the completion window, use the grab-button from the config dialog and aim for it ;)– antiplexJan 17, 2012 at 20:06
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These are the pleasing colors for my eyes during coding. Jazz music not included in theme.
Eclipse Color Themes Plugin file: LukinaJama3.xml on depositfiles
This is the best place for Eclipse color themes:
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3These are nice, but it only changes the code view and not all the windows. Oct 22, 2011 at 21:35
I have to say, this is one area where Eclipse is really weak. Specifically, the import/export of preferences applies to ALL preferences. There is no way to import say just the fonts/color preferences (like you can with Visual Studio) without mucking up my key binding preferences.
Also, I have tried several of these preference files referenced above, and they completely break my Eclipse install.
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4you can import/export only the color prefs. But you have to edit the preferences file manually and delete everything besides the color-related entries Feb 6, 2009 at 20:56
I've created several color themes, and a script to extract a new one from someone's color preferences. I'm currently using one I still have yet to post on the site, but I should eventually get to it.
Easiest way: change the Windows Display Properties main window background color. I went to Appearance tab, changed to Silver scheme, clicked Advanced, clicked on "Active Window" and changed Color 1 to a light gray. All Eclipse views softened.
Since Luna (4.4) there seems to be a full Dark
them in
Window -> Preferences -> General -> Appearance -> Theme -> Dark
For the quick hack, on Linux running GNOME with a Windows keyboard, Windows-Key-M will inverse-color all windows, and Windows-Key-N will inverse color a single window. It's an awesome feature, in my book.
As I replied to "Is there a simple, consistent way to change the color scheme of Eclipse editors?":
I've been looking for this too and after a bit of research found a workable solution. This is based on the FDT editor for Eclipse, but I'm sure you could apply the same logic to other editors.
My blog post: Howto create a color-scheme for FDT
Hope this helps!
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2It is not a real colorscheme... In netbeans you switch the colors once, and it works for all the languages at once. Eclipse has separate settings for every editor, and what's worse the annotations settings are common to all of them. Apr 14, 2010 at 20:59
The best solution I've found is to leave Eclipse in normal bright mode, and use an OS level screen inverter.
On OS X you can do Command + Option + Ctrl + 8, inverts the whole screen.
On Linux with Compiz, it's even better, you can do Windows + N to darken windows selectively (or Windows + M to do the whole screen).
On Windows, the only decent solution I've found is powerstrip, but it's only free for one year... then it's like $30 or something...
Then you can invert the screen, adjust the syntax-level colours to your liking, and you're off to the races, with cool shades on.
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I'm trying to use this on OS X, Eclipse looks good, some other programs look bit unusual. Correct keyboard combo seems to be ctrl+alt+cmd+8 (at least on version 10.6.8). Nov 13, 2011 at 10:07
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1Also changes inverts the colors of the icons, which can be VERY misleading (eg: red for "go", green for "stop").– SMBiggsJun 11, 2012 at 5:45
If you use Aptana then you can download a dark color theme! I have been looking for one recently and found the Aptana one. Thought others might be interested!
Check out: http://www.nightlion.net/themes/2009/aptana-dark-color-theme/
Checkout this color scheme I created for Eclipse PDT. It is based on the Vim Zenburn color scheme developed by slinky
Some people posted options for Linux and Mac, and the Windows (free) equivalent is, if you can deal with it globally:
Set Windows desktop appearance theme window background color. You can keep current/desired theme, just modify the background color of windows. By default, it is set to white. I change it to a shade of grey. I tried dark grey and black before, but then you have to change text font colors globally, and all that's painful.
But a simple shade of grey as background does the trick globally, works with any color text font as long as the shade of grey is not too dark.
It's not the best solution for all editors/IDEs, as I prefer black, but it's the next best free & global workaround on Windows.
I have finally found exactly what I have been looking for, i.e. a dark theme for PyDev (although I still feel like Eclipse is missing out on this).
This is another dark Eclipse theme: http://blog.prabir.me/post/Dark-Eclipse-Theme.aspx.
I have the Visual Studio equivalent of the theme.
I played with customizing the colors. I went with the yellow text/blue background I've liked from Turbo Pascal. The problem I ran into was it let you set the colors of the editors but then the other views like Package Explorer or Navigator stayed with the default black-on-white colors. I'm sure you could do it programatically but there are waaaay to many settings for my patience.
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Most of the other views are controlled by the colors specified by the operating system. For example, on Windows you can head to the Advanced Appearance settings and change the Window item with your desired colors. Of course, this means all your applications change across the entire operating system, which may be good or bad depending on your taste.– cowgodAug 27, 2009 at 5:23
In response to this comment I made a filter for Color Filter plugin for Compiz.
Here's what I got:
Howto:
- Go to /usr/share/compiz/filters/
- Create new file "negative-low-contrast" (as root)
- Insert the attached code into it.
- Go to System->Preferences->CompizConfig ...
- Enter Color Filter Plugin
- Enable it and add newly created filter to the list Profeet!!
Filter code:
!!ARBfp1.0
TEMP temp, neg;
# Dunno what's this... but every other filter starts with this :) ;
TEX temp, fragment.texcoord[0], texture[0], RECT;
# Applying negative filter ;
RCP neg.a, temp.a;
MAD temp.rgb, -neg.a, temp, 1.0;
MUL temp.rgb, temp.a, temp;
MUL temp, fragment.color, temp;
# Lowering contrast and shifting brightness ;
MUL temp.rgb, temp, 0.8;
ADD temp.rgb, temp, 0.25;
MOV result.color, temp;
END
You also can play with the filter. May be you will get something more facinating :) Feel free to share!