Skip to content

Resources and dotfiles to ensure, that most, if not all of your system is in solarized dark!

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

alindl/solarized-everything

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

10 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Solarized Everything

Resources and dotfiles to ensure, that most, if not all of your system is in

✨ SOLARIZED DARK ✨

Instructions are based on Manjaro i3, including installation, but I'll drop some links to the repositories. I'm obviously skipping the ones, where it's easy to find in the settings. (IntelliJ etc.)

This repo is mirrored on GitHub and GitLab.

// TODO check ~/.Xresources colors
// TODO use ~/.Xresources colors

Table of Contents

=================

Ranger

Find your rc.conf file. It's probably in ~/.config/ranger/rc.conf.
If it isn't, do a ranger --copy-config=all to make them. Look for this line(around line number 100): set colorscheme default
or whatever theme is chosen instead of default and change it to
set colorscheme solarized
If it is not there, just add this line.

(DOOM) Emacs

Locate your config.el. (~/.doom.d/config.el)
Find the part where you (setq doom-theme 'doom-one) and change it to
(setq doom-theme 'doom-solarized-dark)
Of course, if you can't find the line, just add it.

i3(-gaps)

You could probably do that through .Xresources, but I figured that out
afterwards. I'm aware that there is a comment above this segment explaining
just that in the i3 file.

Speaking of which, find the i3 config file,
which is located here: ~/.i3/config.
Close to the end of the file, you should find something that looks like
the following lines, but with differend hex values or even stuff like color0 or background
Obviously, change it to those values:

bar {

...

    colors {

     separator  #93a1a1
	   background #002b36
	   statusline #eee8d5

#                              border  backgr. text
            focused_workspace  #2aa198 #2aa198 #073642
            active_workspace   #657b83 #333333 #073642
            inactive_workspace #073642 #073642 #2aa198
            urgent_workspace   #cb4b16 #cb4b16 #073642
    }
}

...


# Theme colors
# class                   border  backgr. text    indic.  child_border
  client.focused          #2aa198 #2aa198 #073642 #FDF6E3 #2aa198
  client.focused_inactive #073642 #073642 #2aa198 #454948 #073642
  client.unfocused        #073642 #073642 #1ABC9C #454948 #073642
  client.urgent           #CB4B16 #FDF6E3 #1ABC9C #268BD2
  client.placeholder      #000000 #0c0c0c #ffffff #000000

  client.background       #2B2C2B

xfce4-terminal

https://github.com/sgerrand/xfce4-terminal-colors-solarized

~/.config/xfce4/terminal/terminalrc

[Configuration]
ColorCursor=#93a1a1
ColorForeground=#839496
ColorBackground=#002b36
ColorPalette=#073642;#dc322f;#859900;#b58900;#268bd2;#d33682;#2aa198;#eee8d5;#002b36;#cb4b16;#586e75;#657b83;#839496;#6c71c4;#93a1a1;#fdf6e3

~/.Xresources

If you don't have this file, just touch ~/.Xresources. The title says it all, you need to change your file,
so these values should look like this:
(This is not the whole file, just the lines that should be changed.
I'm not even sure if this is needed or correct,
it's just what my file looks like)

! special
*.foreground:   #93a1a1
*.background:   #002b36
*.cursorColor:  #93a1a1

! black
*.color0:       #002b36
*.color8:       #657b83

! red
*.color1:       #dc322f
*.color9:       #dc322f

! green
*.color2:       #859900
*.color10:      #859900

! yellow
*.color3:       #b58900
*.color11:      #b58900

! blue
*.color4:       #268bd2
*.color12:      #268bd2

! magenta
*.color5:       #6c71c4
*.color13:      #6c71c4

! cyan
*.color6:       #2aa198
*.color14:      #2aa198

! white
*.color7:       #93a1a1
*.color15:      #fdf6e3


XTerm*background: #2b2b2b
XTerm*foreground: #e7e7e7
XTerm*pointerColor: #16A085

*fadeColor:                       black
*pointerColorBackground:          #2B2C2B
*pointerColorForeground:          #16A085

dunst

See dunstrc file in this repository.
I put in the whole file, you can obviously delete the ones you don't see fit.

On your system, you can find this file in ~/.config/dunstrc

Spotify (using spicetify-cli)

Install spicetify-cli and spicetify-themes-git
yay -S spicetify-cli spicetify-themes-git for Arch-based distros using yay

Repositories: spicetify-cli spicetify-themes

(If you have any issues installing, read
https://github.com/khanhas/spicetify-cli/wiki/Installation#linux-and-macos
and other parts of their wiki.
The following is the usual case that they suggest, I copied it from there.)

Run this command to generate the config file:
spicetify

Make sure config file is created successfully and there is no error, then run:
spicetify backup apply enable-devtool

Throw in this one for good measure, shouldn't really do anything:
spicetify update

Go into this repository and copy the SolarizedDark folder that's in
spicetify and put it in your own ~/.config/spicetify/Themes/ folder.
(There is probably already one in there with the same name, I made some
improvements though)

Select the theme we just copied in:
spicetify config current_theme SolarizedDark

Apply the settings:
spicetify apply

GtK

The way I install this could be Manjaro i3 specific, I'm not sure if bmenu
comes preinstalled with arch.
Nevertheless, if you have pure Arch, you will figure it out.

Install gtk-theme-numix-solarized
yay -S gtk-theme-numix-solarized for Arch-based distros using yay

Repository: numix-solarized-gtk-theme

xfconf-query -c xsettings -p /Net/ThemeName -s "NumixSolarizedDarkCyan"

Open your bmenu (Mod+Ctrl+b is preconfigured for that on Manjaro-i3)
-> System & Settings (7)
-> Appearance (1)
-> Set GTK2 Theme (1)
Find NumixSolarizedDarkCyan in this list, put in the corresponding number,
push the enter key.

-> Set GTK3 Theme (2)
Find NumixSolarizedDarkCyan in this list, put in the corresponding number,
push the enter key.

That's it, all saved. You maybe have to close and open any GtK apps
for these changes to take hold.

Firefox

Theme

There are solarized dark themes, but I don't like the color mapping of
the ones I tested. I use the add-on Zen Fox instead
Install that and of course, switch from light to dark.

Dark Reader (aka. what if the whole Internet was solarized dark?)

You may already know Dark Reader, with which you can change the
Internet to be in dark mode. But did you know,
that you can change the color scheme?

Click on the little icon in your Navbar
-> go to Dev Tools (it's at the bottom right)
-> click Preview new design.

Now your menu should look a bit different.

Click the icon again.
-> Go to See all options, colors.
-> Change Background to #002b36 (Don't forget to hit the enter key)
-> Change Text to #93a1a1 (Enter key)

That's it!

DuckDuckGo

Go to the DuckDuckGo front page
-> Click the burger menu (top right)
-> Themes
-> Appearance

Change all these fields:

Background Color:                                     #002b36
Header Color:                                         #073642 
Result Title Color:                                   #fdf6e3
Result Visited Title Color:                           #93a1a1
Result Snippet Color:                             #839496
Result URL Color:                                     #2aa198
Result Hover, Module, and Dropdown Background Color:  #073642

Save and Exit at the bottom and you are done.

Slack

Preferences (clicking your profile pic or on the workspace)
-> Themes
Obviously choose Dark
Additionally, under Colors there's this field, with the description:
Copy and paste these values to share your custom theme with others
where you just paste in this:
#073642,#002B36,#B58900,#FDF6E3,#CB4B16,#FDF6E3,#2AA198,#DC322F,#002B36,#FDF6E3

About

Resources and dotfiles to ensure, that most, if not all of your system is in solarized dark!

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages