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I use emacs to edit a number of file types, and would like an easy visual queue to tell .c files from .vhd or .py files, for instance. How can I add a custom background color to the major mode for that language?

3 Answers 3

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You can do this via hooks. Among other things you can hook is when a new major mode starts. Put something like this into your .emacs file, and emacs will set your background color to purple every time you go into Python mode.

  (add-hook 'python-mode-hook
            (lambda ()
              (set-background-color "purple")))

Resetting the background color to the default in the case that you switch back to a mode that doesn't have an explicit set-background hook for it is left as an exercise for the reader.

You can also manually set the background color with M-x set-background-color

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  • Note that you cannot change the background color per buffer or per window though, only per frame (see Trey Jackson's answer below).
    – Thomas
    Aug 5, 2011 at 1:45
5

For posterity, as this thread is 4 years old, it is now possible in Emacs 24.4+ to change faces on a buffer local level. Simply define a face and use (face-remap-add-relative) to swap out whatever face you want with it.

Define a defface:

(defface my-special-face '((t :background "aqua")))

Then add a hook to the mode of your choice:

(add-hook 'python-mode-hook
          (lambda ()
            (face-remap-add-relative 'default 'my-special-face)))
4

You cannot set the background color on a buffer-by-buffer basis. See the SU question How can I change the background colour of a single emacs buffer?.

The first answer there shows how you can change the background for a single Emacs frame, which might work for you if you have one frame per file (or per mode).

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