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Custom CSS and JS

SPECIAL NOTE: If Visual Studio Code complains about that it is corrupted, simply click “Don't show again”.

NOTE: Every time after Visual Studio Code is updated, please re-enable Custom CSS.

NOTE: Every time you change the configuration, please re-enable Custom CSS.

Starting from extension version 6.0, to be compatible with VSCode 1.58, the CSS/JS files being applied will be inlined into VSCode's workbench.

Custom CSS to your Visual Studio Code. Based on robertohuertasm’s vscode-icons.

screenshot

Getting Started

  1. Install this extension.

  2. Add to settings.json:

        "vscode_custom_css.imports": [""]
    

    VERY IMPORTANT: Items in vscode_custom_css.imports must be URLs. Plain file paths are NOT URLs.

    • Windows File URL Example: file:///C:/Users/MyUserName/Documents/custom.css

      • The C:/ part is REQUIRED.
    • MacOS and Linux File URL Example: file:///Users/MyUserName/Documents/custom.css

    • See here for more details.

  3. Restart Visual Studio Code with proper permission to modify itself:

    1. Windows: Restart with Administrator Permission.

    2. MacOS and Linux: See instructions below.

  4. Activate command "Reload Custom CSS and JS".

  5. Restart.

Extension commands

As you know to access the command palette and introduce commands you can use F1 (all OSes), Ctrl+Shift+P (Windows & Linux) or Cmd+Shift+P (OS X).

Windows users

In Windows, make sure you run your Visual Studio Code in Administrator mode before enabling or disabling your custom style!

Mac and Linux users

The extension would NOT work if Visual Studio Code cannot modify itself. The cases include:

You need to claim ownership on Visual Studio Code's installation directory, by running this command:

sudo chown -R $(whoami) "$(which code)"
sudo chown -R $(whoami) /usr/share/code

The placeholder <Path to Visual Studio Code> means the path to VSCode installation. It is typically:

Mac and Linux package managers may have customized installation path. Please double check your path is correct.

Variables

File URIs support VSCode variables like: ${userHome}. It just replaces supported variables with their values before parsing into a file path. Supported variables are:

It also supports env variables like ${env:ENV_VAR_NAME} and you can specify a fallback value like ${env:ENV_VAR:defaultvalue}

Example

"vscode_custom_css.imports": ["file://${userHome}/.config/vscode-styles.css"]

Disclaimer

This extension modifies some Visual Studio Code files so use it at your own risk. Currently, icons are not supported by the extension functionality that Visual Studio Code provides so this extension solves this issue by injecting code into:

The extension will keep a copy of the original file in case something goes wrong. That's what the disable command will do for you.

As this extension modifies Visual Studio Code files, it will get disabled with every Visual Studio Code update. You will have to enable icons again via the command palette.

Take into account that this extension is still in beta, so you may find some bugs while playing with it. Please, report them to the issues section of the Github's repo.

Please, leave a review if you can, so the Visual Studio Code Team can know that this is a very demanded feature and, maybe, they can then provide a proper way to extend the IDE regarding icons and customizations soon enough. ;D

More file extensions will be supported shortly!