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Is it possible to open 2 Visual Studio Code sessions with different themes? Maybe like this:

  • Window 1: light theme → live system
  • Window 2: dark theme → development system
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6 Answers 6

416

You can have a different theme per workspace/folder by adjusting the workbench.colorTheme in the workspace settings.

  1. Open a new VSCode window.
  2. Open the project folder where you would like to have a different color theme.
  3. Navigate to File > Preferences > Settings.
  4. Select the "Workspace Settings" tab at the top of the settings screen. Anything you edit in here will now be specific to this workspace.
  5. Search for "colorTheme" and select the color theme you would like for this specific workspace.

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Now, whenever you reopen that folder, the color theme will match what you set in the workspace settings.

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  • 24
    I wish I could give you +10 for this answer.. I've been searching for a plugin with this functionality for ages, but apparently was not clever enough to just check the built-in settings. Thanks!!!
    – dr_barto
    Apr 18, 2019 at 7:52
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    Note that it only changes when you open a new window. It doesn't dynamically change the theme, within the same window, based on the open file. That's what I wanted and it seems like it's not implemented by anyone yet. The idea is here for whomever has time: github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/50157#issuecomment-390933621
    – Aidin
    Jun 8, 2019 at 17:55
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    @Aidin There's an extension called Theme by Language that will change the theme based on the currently open file type. However, I've used this in the past and found it only worked about 95% of the time, which could get a little annoying.
    – Alex Myers
    Jun 8, 2019 at 18:12
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    This will be saved to the workspace's setting file which is version controlled. I don't want to force all the devs using this repo use my theme. Anyway I can set this setting without putting it in the repo?
    – HarryHao
    Oct 2, 2019 at 18:55
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    I have two different windows open and when I change the settings on one window, it changes the other window's setting as well.
    – aerin
    Apr 5, 2020 at 22:19
56

Check out the Window Colors extension which:

Automatically adds a unique color to each window's activityBar and titleBar.

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    This is perfect. I want to quickly identity which project I'm working on, but don't want to change the text editor color theme. This does exactly what I needed. Thanks!
    – Sergey
    Apr 3, 2020 at 20:57
  • This is the best solution! I have to have 3 projects open at the same time to run our app and it was killing me that they were all the same window colors.
    – Kris Boyd
    Sep 28, 2022 at 17:03
  • To use it. ctrl-shift-p -> workspace settings -> extensions -> Window Color configurations and read what to do there.
    – SpiRail
    Nov 2, 2022 at 9:59
  • The idea is good but the colour change is just to subtle to notice in Alt-tab etc
    – Matthew
    May 24, 2023 at 7:32
26

Maybe : Peacock

Subtly change the color of your Visual Studio Code workspace. Ideal when you have multiple VS Code instances, use VS Live Share, or use VS Code's Remote features, and you want to quickly identify your editor.

And this theme combine perfect ! my 10 cents

Tokyo Hack

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  • my doubt is if possible agroup worspace by color in same windows ??? Mar 19, 2020 at 16:42
  • Not sure why this mentions Tokyo Hack specifically, but the Peacock extension, written by John Papa (of Angular style guide fame? Yes, yes it is), is pretty straightforward. F1, type Peacock: change to a favorite color, choose a scheme from the dropdown, and profit.
    – ruffin
    Mar 16, 2021 at 14:14
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  • Press ctrl + , from the keyboard.
  • This will take you to the settings tab.
  • Click on the Workspace Tab
  • Type Theme in the search field.
  • Your will see - Workbench: Color Theme
  • Select the theme you want. And that's all

or

  • make a folder in your project with .vscode

  • make a file with the name of settings.json inside the folder.

  • simply copy paste or write the following code. with the theme name

    { "workbench.colorTheme": "GitHub Dark" }

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In root folder, you can create a folder .vscode, then create a settings.json file.

Insert the follow setting in your settings.json file.

{
    "workbench.colorTheme": "Default Dark+"
}

Then you can set different theme according your project.

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@Alex Myers just highlighting make sure to choose Workspace

Your answer took me straight to the right place. I made the same mistake others are complaining about, i.e. theme changes across all windows. We just missed a small but important step.

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