A relaxed VS Code theme to take a more relaxed view of things.
- Open Extensions sidebar panel in VS Code.
View → Extensions
- Search for
Relaxed
- Click Install to install it.
- Click Reload to reload your editor
- Code > Preferences > Color Theme > Relaxed
First, this theme is new so if something is funky, please open an issue.
These are the things we have control over. If you would like to change something, you can either open a PR and see if I'd like it added, or override the colours in your own settings.json file.
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/getstarted/theme-color-reference
- Fork, Clone and open this repository in VS Code
- Press
F5
(Debug > Start Debugging )to open a new window with your extension loaded. - Open
File > Preferences > Color Themes
and pick the »Relaxed« color theme. - Open a file that has a language associated. The languages' configured grammar will tokenize the text and assign 'scopes' to the tokens. To examine these scopes, invoke the
Inspect TM Scopes
command from the Commmand Palette (Ctrl+Shift+P
orCmd+Shift+P
on Mac) .
- You can relaunch the extension from the debug toolbar after making changes to the files listed above.
- You can also reload (
Ctrl+R
orCmd+R
on Mac) the VS Code window with your extension to load your changes. - When editing workbench colors, it's easiest to test the colors in the settings under
workbench.colorCustomizations
andworkbench.tokenColorCustomizations
. When done, run theGenerate Color Theme From Current Settings
command to generate an updated content for the color theme definition file.
- The token colorization is done based on standard TextMate themes. Colors are matched against one or more scopes.
To learn more about scopes and how they're used, check out the theme documentation.
- To start using your extension with Visual Studio Code copy it into the
<user home>/.vscode/extensions
folder and restart Code.
- Relaxed theme for Terminal - For iTerm, Hyper, the macOS Terminal and a bunch of others.
- Relaxed theme for Atom - The Atom adaption.
Please be aware of the licenses of the components we use in this project. Everything else that has been developed by the contributions to this project is under MIT License.