![]() Icons made by Vectors Market from is licensed by CC 3.0 BY. Small price to pay, I spend half my day staring at VS Code, and a handful of minutes looking at Windows explorer, I’ll take that tradeoff. This theme wont born without the help of following creations, big thanks to them. Note: Depending on your color scheme this can and will make your Windows explorer look horrible. However you might need to restart VS Code to see the changes. In here we’re going to select the “Custom color” option:Īnd finally, in the open menu we click “More”, and enter our custom color!Ĭlick “Done”, and voila! You have finished. Now we go to Windows search (Win key), and type in “colors”:Īnd we open the Choose your accent color Windows option. Dark theme with orange accent based on the Github dark theme. This element doesn’t reference the background color it uses, but the element right above it does! I’d recommend selecting the VS Code file title section: So we should click on the element whose color we want to match. In VS Code, open the Color Theme picker with File > Preferences > Theme > Color Theme. Once we have developer tools open we’re going to click on the element inspector, which is the box with the cursor shown here:Īnd then use that to inspect and find the color we want, note that you could also do this through digging through your theme’s json file, but I think this is relatively easier. First we need to know what color we want, so we’re going to need the Menu bar -> Help -> Toggle developer tools, hope you set the menu bar to toggle, otherwise here’s a good reason to do so! Now we need to change our title bar to match our theme. If you want it gone for good, you can do so by setting the option to "hidden" instead of "toggle". ![]() I like using toggle there, if you press alt it will open and you can use it.
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