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Use features in VS Code to personalize your development experience for various remote environments.
Dan il-brawżer m'għadux appoġġjat.
Aġġorna għal Microsoft Edge biex tieħu vantaġġ mill-aħħar karatteristiċi, aġġornamenti tas-sigurtà, u appoġġ tekniku.
Windows Terminal lets you define your own color schemes, either by using the built-in preset schemes, or by creating your own scheme from scratch. To change schemes, you'll need to edit the settings.json file in an editor such as Visual Studio Code.
Launch Windows Terminal and then select the small downward-facing arrow in the title bar. This will open a pull-down menu that lists the available profiles on your system (for example, Windows PowerShell and Command Prompt) and some other options. Select Settings, and the settings.json file will open in your default text editor.
This file is where you can define various options per window or per profile. To demonstrate, let's change the color scheme for the Command Prompt profile.
Look down the JSON file until you find the section that includes:
"commandline": "cmd.exe",
"hidden": false
Change it to read:
"commandline": "cmd.exe",
"hidden": false,
"colorScheme": "Tango Light"
Notice the extra comma in the hidden line. Once you save this file, Windows Terminal will update any open window. Open a Command Prompt tab if you haven't already, and you'll immediately see that the colors have changed.
The "Tango Light" scheme is included as a default option, but you can create your own scheme from scratch or by copying an existing scheme.
Color schemes can be defined in the schemes
array of your settings.json file. They are written in the following format:
{
"name" : "Campbell",
"cursorColor": "#FFFFFF",
"selectionBackground": "#FFFFFF",
"background" : "#0C0C0C",
"foreground" : "#CCCCCC",
"black" : "#0C0C0C",
"blue" : "#0037DA",
"cyan" : "#3A96DD",
"green" : "#13A10E",
"purple" : "#881798",
"red" : "#C50F1F",
"white" : "#CCCCCC",
"yellow" : "#C19C00",
"brightBlack" : "#767676",
"brightBlue" : "#3B78FF",
"brightCyan" : "#61D6D6",
"brightGreen" : "#16C60C",
"brightPurple" : "#B4009E",
"brightRed" : "#E74856",
"brightWhite" : "#F2F2F2",
"brightYellow" : "#F9F1A5"
},
Every setting, aside from name
, accepts a color as a string in hex format: "#rgb"
or "#rrggbb"
. The cursorColor
and selectionBackground
settings are optional.
Windows Terminal includes these color schemes inside the defaults.json file, which can be accessed by holding Alt and selecting the settings button. Color schemes can not be changed in the defaults.json file. For a color scheme to apply across all profiles, change it in the defaults section of your settings.json file.
Nota
You can print the current color scheme to the Terminal using colortool
, with the commandline colortool -c
For more schemes, see the Custom Terminal Gallery section.
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Taħriġ
Modulu
Personalize your Visual Studio Code remote development workflow - Training
Use features in VS Code to personalize your development experience for various remote environments.