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author | Vidhu Kant Sharma <vidhukant@vidhukant.com> | 2023-08-16 00:48:08 +0530 |
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committer | Vidhu Kant Sharma <vidhukant@vidhukant.com> | 2023-08-16 00:48:08 +0530 |
commit | 88f79788842c6f933a7877e46b94b70b8a862410 (patch) | |
tree | d158e9180a42ef8568ddf4c827c65002acbee1a6 /content/blog/2022 | |
parent | fc8ba4bc49caaddac806de4ee683ca851ca7bff8 (diff) |
removed docs page and moved pages to blog
Diffstat (limited to 'content/blog/2022')
-rw-r--r-- | content/blog/2022/making-your-own-doom-emacs-theme.md | 50 |
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/content/blog/2022/making-your-own-doom-emacs-theme.md b/content/blog/2022/making-your-own-doom-emacs-theme.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..31c9990 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/blog/2022/making-your-own-doom-emacs-theme.md @@ -0,0 +1,50 @@ +--- +title: "Customizing a Doom Emacs Theme" +description: "How to create your own Doom Emacs theme" +date: 2022-12-02T21:33:31+05:30 +--- + +Creating your theme/modifying an existing one, or overriding some faces (globally) in Emacs, especially Doom Emacs is +really easy once you understand how to do it... but it wasn't very easy to *understand* how to do it. Most likely +I was doing something wrong, or maybe it's just because I don't fully know how lisp or emacs works that's why it took me long +but I spent a good part of my evening trying to make even small changes to work. + +So, I have created this short tutorial to leave me (and others having problems) some notes on how to modify a Doom Emacs theme. +I'm using Doom Emacs which comes with the doom-themes packages doing some basic setup so we only need to define some variables and it +automatically applies other faces and stuff, and I'm pretty sure doom-themes can be installed on regular Emacs. + +## Overriding faces + +Each element in an emacs buffer has a "face" which defines its foreground/background color, font styling, etc. +You can do `M-x RET` `describe-char` or `describe-face` to get the face of the area under the cursor, or to get a +list of all the available faces (which is very long) + +The `custom-set-faces!` macro (or `custom-set-faces` for Emacs users) can be used to customize any face: + +``` lisp +(custom-set-faces! + '(default :background "#100b13") + '(cursor :background "#0ec685" :foreground) + '(line-number :slant normal :background "#100b13") + '(line-number-current-line :slant normal :background "#21242b")) +``` + +You can add something like this to your `~/.doom.d/config.el` + +## Using a doom theme as a template + +Another way to modify your Doom theme is to use an existing theme as a template (or, starting from bottom up!) +and modifying it. + +### How to modify an existing theme: + +1. Go to [this page](https://github.com/doomemacs/themes) and choose any theme you like, and download the raw file into +`~/.doom.d/themes/<theme-name>-theme.el`. The theme name can be anything, but make sure it ends with "-theme.el" +or Doom won't recognise it as a theme. + +2. Open the theme in your favourite text editor (I wonder which one it is) and edit the line that says `(def-doom-theme <theme-name>` +and replace `<theme-name>` with any name you like, make sure not to use the original name (or the name of any other theme that already exists on your system) or it would create a clash. +Now, edit the theme to your liking and you're good to go! + +3. Open a new Doom Emacs frame and enter `SPC h t t` and select your new theme! + |