
When the daemon starts, it’s not in a graphical env, so it doesn’t load the theme. Use the customize-themes framework, accessible through the menu bar -> options -> customize emacs -> custom-themes.

(setq solarized-high-contrast-mode-line t)

You disable theme loading when not in a graphical env: (when (boundp 'enable-color-theme) Was wondering what those links were after commenting. For many years I kept trying other themes, both light and dark, and always the same thing happened: after a few days I would go back to the default theme (and the fg/bg-swapped dark.

#Emacs themes pdf#
When using the daemon you might trigger that without being able to confirm it, which is usually how I lose my theme.įor what it’s worth, my config works with this: dotfiles/init.el at f47850e93ef32a29401d4f1cec5ba1c9dec3fe2d Įdit: Whoops, sorry. A theme megapack for GNU Emacs, inspired by community favorites. The default theme that comes with Emacs is seriously underrated And if you just swap the foreground and background it makes for a pretty good dark theme, too. native (native Haskell) odt (OpenOffice text document) opml (OPML) opendocument (OpenDocument) org (Emacs Org mode) pdf (PDF) plain (plain text). How are you setting your theme? Anything in the *Messages* buffer? Emacs has this feature where it will warn you that themes run arbitray lisp, and you need to interactively confirm that you’re ok with that.
