Update August 2016: adds: Dark theme works well with Eclipse 4.5 onward with Windows 10. No more black text on black background Update June 2014: As mentioned din ', has a dark theme included in it (see 's ): When Eclipse 3.0 shipped in 2004 it brought a new look to the workbench. Now, 10 years later, an entirely new Dark Theme is launching. The theme extends to more than just the Widgets. Syntax highlighting has also been improved to take advantage of the new look. The mentions: A new dark window theme has been introduced. This popular community theme demonstrates the power of the underlying Eclipse 4 styling engine.
![Eclipse Eclipse](http://i1-mac.softpedia-static.com/screenshots/Eclipse-IDE-for-Java-and-DSL-Developers_5.jpeg)
You can enable it from the General Appearance preference page. Plug-ins can contribute extensions to this theme to style their own specific views and editors to match the window theme. Update April 2013: It seems the solution below don't work well with Eclipse Juno 4.2 and Windows 8, according to in.
One solution which (mostly) work is the (compatible Juno 4.2 and even Kepler 4.3), from the GitHub project,. Mentions: The first is to change the appearance of what is inside the editor windows. That can be done with the Eclipse Colour Theme plugin. My favourite editor theme is Vibrant Ink with the Monaco font. They explain how to install their themes very well , although you get a fine set of dark themes with the default plugin install and may not need to come back to their website for any more.
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Get the plugin here. The second stage is darkening the chrome of the UI, which is all the widgets and menus and everything outside of the child window canvases. This plugin gives you a GUI editor for the chrome colour scheme:. If you want a dark one, go ahead and click away until eclipse is dark. Once you are done, some GUI surface area will show through the system theme as mentioned at the top of this post.
Rather than using that editor, you could install the pre-baked Dark Juno theme instead. The install is manual. Start by downloading it from here:. It has to be copied into your eclipse dropins folder. This lives next to the eclipse executable, not in your workspace or someplace like that.
In my case the command to do the copy was: cp./plugins/com.github.eclipsecolortheme.themes1.0.0.19.jar /usr/lib/eclipse/dropins/ You could be running eclipse from any directory though, so which eclipse will tell you where it should go. Restart eclipse and you should find a Dark Juno option under Preferences::General::Appearance. It is a nice neutral grey with some gradients and is a very good option. Update December 2012 (20 months later): The blog post ' mentions this: The big fun is that, the codes are minimized by using Eclipse4 platform technologies like. It proves that again, the concise codes and advanced features could be achieved by contributing or extending with the external form(like library, framework). New language is not necessary just for this kind of purpose. Update July 2012 (15 months later): I have seen one!
![Eclipse Ide For Mac Os Z Eclipse Ide For Mac Os Z](http://tuanpm.net/images/espdev/lqeRIZW.png)
(Ie, a fully dark theme for Eclipse), as reported by in ': If you want to play with it, you only need to write a plug-in, create a CSS file and use the org.eclipse.e4.ui.css.swt.theme extension point to point to your file. If you export your plug-in, place it in the “dropins” folder of your Eclipse installation and your styling is available. Mentions in the comments having publish! That you don't always need a plugin: see ' for an example, based on gtkrc resource. Original answer: March 2011 Note that a full dark theme will be possible with e4. (see or ): In the meantime, only for editors though (which isn't what you want but still merit to be mentioned):: 'Fresh up your Eclipse with super-awesome color themes!' UPDATE 2: A fork of this plugin has been merged with the main Eclipse Platform.
You should find it pre-installed in the future Eclipse releases;) UPDATE: I released a new version, it's a little bit darker, now pretty everything that can be currently modified has been aligned to the theme colors. Here is a screenshot: if you may like, I uploaded on github a dark theme I made some months ago to avoid blinding my eyes when spending many hours on the editor. I made it because with all the others themes some Eclipse parts remains ugly and unstyled. You can find it here: With my Eclipse configurations works quite ok, if you'll find some elements that remains unstyled you can submit an issue or suggest a change and I'll try to correct it if it's possible;) (remind that currently, CSS styling support in Eclipse it's uncomplete and sometimes buggy.). Here is my Black Eclipse Custom CSS for Chrome Theme Plugin.
Usable with eclipse 4.2 and 4.3. Main goal was to make it look nice in ubuntu, besides making it 'darker'. Caution: May or may not work on Windows Systems, only checked with ubuntu.
Required: Chrome Theme and Color Theme plugin. Install those mentioned plugins. They can be found in the eclipse marketplace. Install my variant of Gedit Oblivion Theme in Color Theme and activate it.
Insert the custom css in css editor of Chrome Theme. I spend several hours with CSS Spy to find out all the relevant information to make eclipse as black and this file as small as possible. There is also an.epf File for the Chrome Theme plugin preferences you should import. You can get it from my dropbox: In the end your eclipse will look like this: Have Fun!
I'm trying to get Eclipse 4.5.2 running on Macs with OS X 10.10.5 and Oracle Java 8u73 I got to the point where trying to start Eclipse results in The JVM shared library '$JAVAHOME/bin./jre/lib/server/libjvm.dylib' does not contain the JNICreateJavaVM symbol. Googling this returns a whole bunch of suggestions, none of which work.
Some say you absolutely MUST have the JDK (I'm using the JRE). Others emphatically say the JRE is all you need.
Some suggest editing an Info.plist or another, with people responding 'Yeah that worked!' Right along with 'That didn't work' How do I get past this message? You need the JDK because, well, to be honest Apple hates Java and has done a thorough job of screwing up what used to be the best OS for Java development. The 'you need legacy Java' message was from OS X, not Eclipse.
The advice to download and install it is bad advice, but sadly nothing that Eclipse can remedy. Installing 'legacy Java' just reverts your system to a VERY outdated JRE and renders much Java-based software, including Eclipse, broken. Eclipse requires Java 7 or above (this year's release of Eclipse packages in June will require Java 8 ), so the best thing is to download JDK 1.8 (not just the JRE), install that, then point your eclipse.ini file to it's exact location per the instructions at the. Oracle JDK download links change often, so it's best to Google for 'JDK 8 download' and you'll find it. As it stands at the time I'm writing this. quoted from.