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A plugin I installed recently (Aptana Studio) modified all sorts of preference settings, and uninstalling the plugin did not get me back to where I was before so I have to revert the settings by hand. One of these is the colors used for the changed text in the compare editor(s). I don't see how I can modify these preferences via the "Colors and Fonts" settings, perhaps because it's not clear which color settings I need to modify.

Attached is a screenshot showing how things currently look, i.e. black and dark grey are used to highlight changed sections of Java code, and I want to have something which is easier to read (it used to be that these were light colors which worked well with my other color settings).

Screenshot

Can anyone comment as to which color settings I should modify?

5 Answers 5

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I had the same problem using Aptana Studio 3. It messed up my Eclipse Preferences. For some reason you cannot reset the background color for the text compare window under Window->Preferences.

Anyway, do the following to fix it:

Go into your working directory you are using when starting Eclipse, lets say its /home/src In /home/src there is a ".metadata" folder. Then go into the ".plugins" folder. Then "org.eclipse.core.runtime". Then ".settings". Now there should be file called "org.eclipse.compare.prefs". Open it, find the line starting with "AbstractTextEditor.Color.Background". This one is some sort of general global background color for TextEditors from type AbstractTextEditor. Change it to your needs using RGB color values. Save it. Restart Eclipse. Worked for me.

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  • Helped me a lot to cleanup garbage after Aptana Studio Jan 12, 2012 at 16:24
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    Setting it to AbstractTextEditor.Color.Background=250,250,250 worked great for me. Thanks
    – Tim
    Feb 16, 2012 at 17:38
  • AbstractTextEditor.Color.Background=250,250,250 helped me too, thanks Mar 12, 2012 at 12:57
  • It went a bit funny on me again recently so I also needed to add AbstractTextEditor.Color.Foreground=0,0,0as well as the AbstractTextEditor.Color.Background=250,250,250 I mentioned in the comment above
    – Tim
    Aug 8, 2012 at 8:51
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    I just deleted the contents of the file and i got the eclipse defaults back.
    – Chris
    Nov 14, 2012 at 8:32
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Go to Preferences -> Aptana Studio -> Themes and change to Eclipse.

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  • 1
    Better to do Help->About Eclipse->Installation Details and uninstall that piece of crap Aptana that hosed my Eclipse installation.
    – Dave
    Mar 12, 2012 at 13:25
  • This may be effective as long as you still have Aptana Studio installed. In my case, I unwittingly gave myself a bigger headache because I reinstalled Eclipse Indigo but never tried to uninstall the Aptana Studio components beforehand. So those settings were left in org.eclipse.compare.prefs to confound me. (Until I found this post.) :-)
    – L2G
    May 24, 2012 at 19:59
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There is a Text Compare category in Colors and Fonts, where I found the settings I believe were changed. I describe my colors here:

Conflicting change color: 255, 0, 0 (RGB red) Incoming change color: 0, 0, 255 (RGB blue) Outgoing change color: 0, 0, 0 (RGB black) Resolved change color: 0, 255, 0 (RGB green)

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    Yes I have the same settings for those colors, and since they're not black or grey I assumed that these were not the color settings in play. Aug 8, 2011 at 21:08
  • Sadly I don't have any concrete idea left. Maybe you could try to export your preferences (File/Export/Preferences) from the Aptana-modified one and from a clean workspace (preferences are workspace related), and do a file-level diff to find what is changed - but this way seems hard because as you cannot export only the color settings... Aug 8, 2011 at 21:20
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Under your "Colors and Fonts" setting, did you check the settings under the "Text Compare" node? There, I have options for incoming, outgoing, resolved and conflicted colors. You can hit 'reset' on all of those to see if those are in fact the settings.

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  • Yes I have looked into this section, but none of the colors there are black or grey (the offending colors I'm trying to reset), and I'm afraid to hit reset since it will not only reset these but also every other color and font setting I've made so far. Aug 8, 2011 at 21:06
  • I am having the same issue after installing Appcelerator (titanium). were you manage to solve this annoying problem?
    – Reusable
    Oct 27, 2011 at 4:07
  • I tried the very same thing you suggested, but to no avail. It really does seem like the surest solution is to remove org.eclipse.compare.prefs and start fresh with the colors. I noticed that this file contained a lot of lines with settings ending in "SystemDefault=false". This may be the root of the problem, but I'm not sure. Once I removed (well, renamed) that file and saw the default colors, I was happy and I let it be.
    – L2G
    May 24, 2012 at 19:56
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My answer is a continuation of my comments to the accepted answer.

Its just easier to include my entire org.eclipse.compare.prefs file here. The colours are not great but they work. Its then easier for you to modify them yourself to an appealing colour palette.

AbstractTextEditor.Color.Background.SystemDefault=false
AbstractTextEditor.Color.Foreground.SystemDefault=false
AbstractTextEditor.Color.Foreground=128,0,128
AbstractTextEditor.Color.SelectionBackground=0,128,0
currentLineColor=0,255,255 
AbstractTextEditor.Color.SelectionForeground.SystemDefault=false
AbstractTextEditor.Color.Background=250,250,250
AbstractTextEditor.Color.SelectionBackground.SystemDefault=false
eclipse.preferences.version=1
AbstractTextEditor.Color.SelectionForeground=21, 137, 255

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