[[!meta title="Colour your Emacs with ease"]] [[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2024 Ryota Sawada"]] [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/color-nav)" raw="yes"]] # Colour your Emacs with ease Ryota Sawada (he/him) - Pronunciation: Ree-yo-tah, https://hachyderm.io/@rytswd https://x.com/rytswd [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/color-before)" raw="yes"]] Emacs comes with various themes to pick from, and there are myriad different themes out on the Internet. After choosing a theme, you can make any adjustments to add or remove certain colours exactly as you wish. Emacs provides you so much control over how you work, write, code, and everything in between, including the colour choice. You are certainly left equipped with all the controls for your theme as well. However, when it comes to colour, there is a bit of difficulty: RGB. Hexadecimal colour codes are ubiquitous and relatively easy to understand. Yet, they are difficult to work with, especially when you need to make different shades and variants. In recent years, CSS started to support not just sRGB (standard RGB), but other colour spaces such as HSL, Oklab, etc. With Emacs, we also have a great set of tools from color.el, as well as this amazing package called ct.el () In this talk, we will have a quick look at different colour spaces than sRGB, namely HSL and LCH. We will check out how ct.el can make a set of colour shades and variants at ease, and how they can help define themes. Finally, Ryota will share his own theme called Hasliberg Theme, which is using the full power of LCH. Resources (will be public starting Dec 7): - - About the speaker: Ryota started his Emacs journey more than a decade ago, but was forced to put it aside for work requirements soon after. A few years ago, he made a return to Emacs, and now is using Emacs almost exclusively for any sort of coding tasks. This talk focuses on the modern Emacs setup where he thinks his Emacs looks and works better than many other editors. He works for Civo as a Principal Engineer. # Discussion ## Questions and answers - Q: Is there any intention to create a library for working with more experimental color spaces? Pulling code out of Hasliberg for this purpose, perhaps? - A: Started the journey just for myself, and didn't think this would be useful for others. - A: Making it a library is definitely something that I can think about. - Q: Can we have a dark as well as light theme variations made from your theme? - A: You can customize the code easily into dark, light and change something based on someone's mood. Keep in mind that it is a personal theme, so customize as you see fit. ## Notes - \ Great talk! Thank you 🙂 - \ Excellent talk, thanks! \[11:33\] - \ Beautiful theme - \ Interesting idea to be inspired from tailwind and frontend dev, thanks for talk  \[11:34\] - \<@sachac\> [https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el](https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el) has some interesting colour experiments as well - \ i felt about same with the christmas tree colored code editor - sachac: annoyance is a great motivator for learning Emacs Lisp - sachac: Yay fellow Dvorak user! - \ : [https://github.com/rytswd/hasliberg-theme](https://github.com/rytswd/hasliberg-theme) - Thanks :) - \ Thank you everyone for tuning in! Also my slides are available at [https://codeberg.org/rytswd/emacsconf-2024](https://codeberg.org/rytswd/emacsconf-2024) [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/color-after)" raw="yes"]] [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/color-nav)" raw="yes"]]