Using a Custom Theme
Author:Anda Toshiki
Updated:6 days ago
Words:362
Reading:2 min
Twoslash uses your markdown.theme
for syntax highlighting, but there are a few other things you can do to customize the look and feel of your code examples — particulary the generated Twoslash interface.
CSS Variables
The following CSS variables (and their defaults) are available to style Twoslash interface:
css
:root {
--vp-twoslash-c-annotation-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-brand: var(--vp-c-brand);
--vp-twoslash-c-error-bg: var(--vp-c-red-dimm-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-error-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-error-bg: var(--vp-c-red-dimm-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-error-fg: var(--vp-c-red-dark);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-log-bg: var(--vp-c-mute-dark);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-log-fg: var(--vp-c-gray);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-warn-bg: var(--vp-c-yellow-dimm-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-warn-fg: var(--vp-c-yellow-dark);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-bg: var(--vp-c-bg-elv);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-border: var(--vp-c-divider);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-underline: var(--vp-c-text-2);
--vp-twoslash-lsp-shadow: var(--vp-shadow-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-query-bg: var(--vp-c-mute-darker);
--vp-twoslash-c-query-fg-2: var(--vp-c-text-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-query-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
}
:root {
--vp-twoslash-c-annotation-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-brand: var(--vp-c-brand);
--vp-twoslash-c-error-bg: var(--vp-c-red-dimm-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-error-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-error-bg: var(--vp-c-red-dimm-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-error-fg: var(--vp-c-red-dark);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-log-bg: var(--vp-c-mute-dark);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-log-fg: var(--vp-c-gray);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-warn-bg: var(--vp-c-yellow-dimm-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-logger-warn-fg: var(--vp-c-yellow-dark);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-bg: var(--vp-c-bg-elv);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-border: var(--vp-c-divider);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
--vp-twoslash-c-lsp-underline: var(--vp-c-text-2);
--vp-twoslash-lsp-shadow: var(--vp-shadow-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-query-bg: var(--vp-c-mute-darker);
--vp-twoslash-c-query-fg-2: var(--vp-c-text-2);
--vp-twoslash-c-query-fg: var(--vp-c-text-1);
}
Dark/Light Theme
If you pass a responsive theme to markdown.theme
, you probably also want to hide/show the correct theme based on the user's settings.
ts
ts
export defaultdefineConfig ({markdown : {theme : {dark : 'vitesse-dark',light : 'vitesse-light' },},})
ts
export defaultdefineConfig ({markdown : {theme : {dark : 'vitesse-dark',light : 'vitesse-light' },},})
You can do this with the following CSS:
css
/*
* Hide block based on theme
* `[class*='-dark']` matches `'vitesse-dark'`
* `[class*='-light']` matches `'vitesse-light'`
*/
html:not(.dark) pre.shiki[class*='-dark'] {
display: none;
}
html:not(.dark) pre.shiki[class*='-light'] {
display: block;
}
html.dark pre.shiki[class*='-dark'] {
display: block;
}
html.dark pre.shiki[class*='-light'] {
display: none;
}
/*
* Hide block based on theme
* `[class*='-dark']` matches `'vitesse-dark'`
* `[class*='-light']` matches `'vitesse-light'`
*/
html:not(.dark) pre.shiki[class*='-dark'] {
display: none;
}
html:not(.dark) pre.shiki[class*='-light'] {
display: block;
}
html.dark pre.shiki[class*='-dark'] {
display: block;
}
html.dark pre.shiki[class*='-light'] {
display: none;
}