2.8 KiB
How to write themes
Introduction
bumblebee-status
themes are simply JSON files that describe various attributes (foreground color,
background color, etc.) of the blocks that make up a status bar.
It is possible to specify each attribute at various levels:
- For a specific state of a specific module
- For a specific module
- A cycle of attributes (those are cycled through widget-by-widget)
- Default values
Looking up a value follows the "more specific rather than more generic" approach. In other words, if a foreground color exists for the "warning" state of module "a", any less specific foreground color value that would match will be ignored.
Themes are loaded from the following locations:
$(BUMBLEBEE_STATUS_BASE_DIR)/themes/
~/.config/bumblebee-status/themes/
Basic structure
A very simple theme file looks like this:
{
"icons": [ "awesome-fonts" ],
"defaults": {
"fg": "#000000",
"bg": "#ffffff",
"warning": {
"fg": "#ff0000",
"bg": "#ffffff"
}
}
}
Icons
Using the icons
directive, it's possible to reuse icon definitions for multiple themes.
The value of the field is the basename of a JSON file located in $(THEME_DIRECTORY)/icons/
.
The format of the icon file is identical to the theme itself (as the two are essentially just
merged into a single JSON.
Color definitions and pyWAL support
bumblebee-status
supports github:dylanaraps/pywal definitions.
To make use of them, simply generate a colorset using pyWAL and reference it in the theme like this:
{
"icons": [ ... ],
"colors": [ "wal" ],
"defaults": {
"critical": {
"fg": "cursor",
"bg": "color5"
},
"warning": {
"fg": "cursor",
"bg": "color6"
},
}
}
Additionally, you can use the colors
directive to set up named colors for your scheme:
{
"icons": [ ... ],
"colors": [ { "red": "#ff0000", "green": "#00ff00", "black": "#000000" } ],
"defaults": {
"critical": {
"fg": "red",
"bg": "black"
}
}
Pango support
All values that accept a full text (i.e. the base level, prefix
and suffix
) accept a special
attribute pango
instead of all other attributes. In other words, if you specify pango
,
any other attribute on that level (foreground color, etc.) will be ignored!
Inside pango
, you can just specify arbitrary Pango attributes, and those will be applied to a
<span></span>
that's automatically enclosing the actual text.
Full list of attributes
(TODO: Add explanation)
- defaults
- cycle
- icons
- warning
- critical
- fg
- bg
- separator
- padding
- pango
- prefix
- suffix
- default-separators
- separator-block-width
- <module name>
- <state>