Right now, it is a faint gray overlay, which is hard to see. Any way to change the default color?
8 Answers
Add the following lines into "Editor: Token Color Customizations" setting, inside settings.json file.
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.selectionBackground": "#135564",
"editor.selectionHighlightBackground": "#135564"
},
See Theme Color Reference for more options
-
7Is there any way to change the text color? Otherwise you have to find a background color that maintains readability when paired with every single color in your color scheme. This is one of two issues that unfortunately keep me from using VS Code...– sleightyOct 5, 2017 at 20:11
-
7@BrunoBEly If you open
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {}
then start typing"editor.selection
, the autocomplete menu will suggest all possible keys and their explanation, including the selection foreground.– TobiaNov 2, 2017 at 14:59 -
2@Tobia thanks for the tip! I found it, but am probably doing something wrong. I set both background and foreground to red, but only background seems to work (I'm using VS Code 1.18.0)– sleightyNov 15, 2017 at 20:00
-
3
-
2This does not seem to work for Python, setting
selectionHighlightBackground
does not seem to affect what color vscode uses when highlighting uses of a variable or function (for example)– jrhJun 29, 2020 at 20:53
The above answers cover the Selected text
and areas with same content as selection
, but they miss the Current Search Match
and Other Search Matches
-- which have the same problem.
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.findMatchBackground": "#00cc44a8", //Current SEARCH MATCH
"editor.findMatchHighlightBackground": "#ff7b00a1" //Other SEARCH MATCHES
}
Note that the above settings will also affect the colors when using Change All Occurrences CtrlF2 (a super-useful command that intelligently selects all occurrences of a string, placing cursors at each location for multiple-instance editing).
UPDATEs:
For those using the popular extension Numbered Bookmarks - you can now change the background color of bookmarked lines - makes it über-easy to notice them. (Have you ever wanted a way to temporarily mark line(s) in your code, as with a highlighter on paper?) Add this line to your settings.json (also under workbench.colorCustomizations):
"numberedBookmarks.lineBackground": "#007700"
And don't miss Henry Zhu's useful tip here. I added Henry's tip to the settings above, and find the overall effect improved. (Henry's tip is not included within this answer - please click the link to read Henry's additional tip)
Tom Mai adds via a comment:
Make sure both colors for
editor.findMatchBackground
andeditor.findMatchHighlightBackground
have transparency (or have some alpha values), in order foreditor.selectionBackground
andeditor.selectionHighlightBackground
to show through the searches. You can keep both colors,editor.selectionBackground
andeditor.selectionHighlightBackground
, non-transparent (without alpha values) to an extent, and it works flawlessly
Example of a typical settings file, post mod:
{ "git.enableSmartCommit": true, "git.autofetch": true, "breadcrumbs.enabled": true, "git.confirmSync": false, "explorer.confirmDelete": false, "code-runner.saveFileBeforeRun": true, "code-runner.saveAllFilesBeforeRun": true, "workbench.activityBar.visible": true, "files.trimTrailingWhitespace": true, "telemetry.enableTelemetry": false, "scm.providers.visible": 0, //0 allows manual resize of the Source Control panels "editor.renameOnType": true, //Added Aug 2020: renames matching HTML tags "workbench.colorCustomizations": { "editor.selectionBackground": "#e788ff7c", //Currently SELECTED text "editor.selectionHighlightBackground": "#ff00005b", //Same content as selection "editor.findMatchBackground": "#00cc44a8", //Current SEARCH MATCH "editor.findMatchHighlightBackground": "#ff7b00a1", //Other SEARCH MATCHES "numberedBookmarks.lineBackground": "#007700" //Henry's tip goes here... (don't forget to add comma to line above) } }
Where to find the settings.json file:
Depending on your platform, the user settings file is located here:
Windows %APPDATA%\Code\User\settings.json
macOS $HOME/Library/Application Support/Code/User/settings.json
Linux $HOME/.config/Code/User/settings.json
ALTERNATE method to open the settings.json file:
Ctrl + , (comma) to open Settings
Workbench
Settings Editor
In the search box at top, paste-in
workbench.colorCustomizations
On the left, click
Workbench
and thenAppearance
Click the link to right:
Edit in settings.json
References:
https://code.visualstudio.com/api/references/theme-color#editor-colors
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/getstarted/themes#_customize-a-color-theme
-
1I found these also useful in conjunction with this answer to find matches at a glance. Note the support for RGBA (in my use, the 75 alpha setting at the end of the color values:
"editor.wordHighlightBorder": "#00ff0075", "editor.findMatchHighlightBorder": "#00ff0075"
Oct 17, 2019 at 16:15 -
-
Anyone knows how this is possible for the matches in the terminal search? Jul 27, 2020 at 14:46
-
Thank you for this. Instead of using
editor.findMatchBackground
, I ended up usingeditor.findMatchBorder
, which I set to#ff0000
(red). Nov 24, 2020 at 19:55 -
Hi cssyphus. I appreciate you wanting to encourage upvoting here, but most readers don't even sign in or have an account, so it is really advice for quite a small audience. Since it is meta-advice not relating to the technical content, my advice as an editor is to remove it. I think we can assume that readers who are signed in will know how to upvote (and if we find specific people that do not know this, we can advise them in the comments).– halferDec 4, 2020 at 15:28
If anyone finds this and, like me, was unable to get the above config working try doing this.
- go to file > Preferences > settings
- type in the search Editor token color customizations
- under the Editor token color customizations header
- click on edit in settings.json
- on the right hand column select user settings
- paste this into the json object
Be sure to replace the #'s with colors you want to see.
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.lineHighlightBackground": "#<color1>",
"editor.selectionBackground": "#<color2>",
"editor.selectionHighlightBackground": "#<color3>",
"editor.wordHighlightBackground": "#<color4>",
"editorCursor.foreground": "#<color5>"
},
My understanding of the above config.
editor.lineHighlightBackground - when you click on a line this is the color the line background will be.
"editor.selectionBackground" - The background of the word you have selected with your cursor.
"editor.selectionHighlightBackground" - This is the background of selections elsewhere in the file which matches the word you have selected with your cursor. Think of a variable named foo and it's used all over a file. You then select one 'foo' with your cursor, and all the other 'foo' on the page will be of the color specified in this variable.
"editor.wordHighlightBackground" - This is the color of selected text if the default highlight word on click does not take effect. I've only seen this value make a difference if you click on a word that does not auto-select.
editorCursor.foreground - this is the color of your cursor.
-
2This should be the answer. These are the settings used in VSCode version 1.3+ May 1, 2019 at 15:33
-
editor.lineHighlightBackground doesn't seem to be there anymore, and I think that they're saying it was intentionally removed: github.com/dracula/visual-studio-code/issues/68– havlockJul 4, 2019 at 7:27
-
-
1Thanks, been trying to find this for days, no one ever mentioned wordHighlightBackground! Aug 15, 2019 at 20:15
-
As I have tested, setting border color makes it easier to read than setting background color, which is what Sublime Text does.
For example, add these lines in settings.json
:
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.selectionHighlightBorder": "#FFFA",
},
Selected words will be displayed like this:
you can change it with your favorite color by:
Steps
- Open visual code
- Goto file menu
- Preferences -> Settings
after open settings you will update your setting on your right side column, copy and paste this code inside the main brackets { ... }
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.selectionBackground": "#f00", // red hexadecimal code
"editor.selectionHighlightBackground": "#fff" // white hex code
},
-
-
1giovannipds, its just name to show, that you can add any color Name, its not value– RizwanOct 2, 2018 at 21:54
-
1That's code, so it's wrong.
red
andwhite
are web colors, so that can confuses people.. Oct 5, 2018 at 19:04 -
3VS Code --> File --> Preferences --> Settings, then search for "workbench.colorCustomizations"... copy, paste, done!– zipzitOct 8, 2020 at 2:34
Update See @Jakub Zawiślak's answer for VScode 1.12+
Old answer
Visual Studio Code calls this selection highlighting and unfortunately, I don't think the color is customizable currently. Themes can control the 'selection' color, but the 'selection highlight' color is hardcoded.
See this issue tracking a possible solution: https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/1636
(As a side note, you can toggle this feature or/off with the editor.selectionHighlight
setting.)
-
5
-
4Updated to reference Jakub Zawiślak's answer for modern versions of VSCode Jul 17, 2017 at 16:53
If anyone found themselves reading @FujiRoyale's answer as none of the others worked, and wondered why his/her's also didn't work, but as it was more recent wondered why, I followed their answer, and had (with v1.18 of vscode) this as a user settings
setup:
{
// Is git enabled
"git.enabled": true,
// Path to the git executable
"git.path": "C:\\Users\\t606964\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Git\\mingw64\\bin\\git.exe",
"workbench.startupEditor": "newUntitledFile",
// other settings
//
"editor.fontSize": 12,
"editor.tabSize": 2,
"git.confirmSync": false,
"workbench.colorTheme": "Monokai",
"editor.fontWeight": "bold",
"editor.formatOnSave": true,
"editor.formatOnPaste": true,
"workbench.iconTheme": "vscode-icons",
"explorer.confirmDelete": false,
"files.autoSave": "off",
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.lineHighlightBackground": "#f00",
"editor.selectionBackground": "#0f0",
"editor.wordHighlightBackground": "#00f",
"editorCursor.foreground": "#ff0"
}
}
Note the indentation and commas and removal of double quotes from their answer (which I had to play with to get it right, which wasn't that clear from the answer). There should be no need to restart vscode, but it may be worth going to File > Autosave
and see if you start getting primary colour highlights. And then choose better colours for your highlights.
You can also make this work in workspace settings
by pasting
"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
"editor.lineHighlightBackground": "#f00",
"editor.selectionBackground": "#0f0",
"editor.wordHighlightBackground": "#00f",
"editorCursor.foreground": "#ff0"
}
in between the existing {}
in that right-hand settings pane.
Have you tried using/adding extension Text Marker (Highlighter)
by Ryuichi Inagaki ??
You can select/highlight a selection block, right click Toggle highlight
to give it a unique color, then continue and repeat with other selection blocks, giving them each different distinct colors which I find most useful!
-
1Hello and welcome to SO! Please read the tour, and How do I write a good answer? Please consider adding a code snippet to show how to use this extension and elaborate how it solves the question. Jan 28, 2021 at 15:34
00
hex bits at the end of the color code. E.g., to disable the line highlight background, use:"editor.lineHighlightBackground": "#ffffff00",
.