Fonts and colors in Eclipse
Eclipse uses the fonts and colors provided by the operating system as much as possible. On Windows the platform
color and font settings are found on the General > Colors and Fonts preference page. The font used by most
widgets in Eclipse is the one set in the Message Box settings of the properties. However, operating systems do not
provide enough colors to handle all of the extra information that colors and fonts provide in Eclipse.
Fonts
There are 4 main fonts in use by the Eclipse platform. They are:
- Banner Font
- Used in PDE editors, welcome pages and in the title area of many wizards. For instance the New Project wizard
uses this font for the top title,
- Header Font
- Used as a section heading. For instance the Welcome page for the Eclipse Platform uses this font for the top
title,
- Text Font
- Used in text editors.
- Dialog Font
- Used in dialogs.
These fonts can be set via the
General > Appearance > Colors
and Fonts preference page. As well as these 4 fonts there are several other secondary font settings. These
default to the text font. They can be found on the Colors and Fonts preference page:
- Compare Text Font
- Console Text Font
- Debug Console Font
- Detail Pane Text Font
- Java Compare Text Font
- Java Editor Text Font
- Memory Views Table Font
- Part Title Font (optional: used by some presentations)
- View Message Font (optional: used by some presentations)
Colors
Eclipse uses colors as an information enhancement in many places. Whenever possible the operating system color
settings are used, but in cases where the operating system settings are not enough, Eclipse defines other colors. All
of these colors can be adjusted via the following preference pages:
-
General > Appearance >
Colors and Fonts > Basic (Error text, hyperlink text, active hyperlink text)
-
General > Editors > Text
Editors (Foreground, background and other appearance colors)
-
General > Editors > Text
Editors > Annotations (Text editors annotation colors)
-
General > Editors > Text
Editors > Linked Mode (Text editors linked mode colors)
-
General > Editors > Text
Editors > Quick Diff (Colors used by text editors quick diff feature)
-
General > Search
(Foreground for potential matches)
-
Run/Debug > Console
(Standard Out, Standard Error, Standard In)
-
Run/Debug (Variable Views
changed value, Memory View unbuffered lines)
-
Ant (Error, Warning,
Information, Verbose, Debug)
-
Java > Editor (Line
number, matching brackets, current line, print, find scope, hyperlink, selection foreground, selection
background)
-
Java > Editor > Syntax
Coloring (Javadoc HTML tags, Javadoc keywords, Javadoc links, Javadoc others, keyword 'return', keywords
excluding 'return', Method names, Multi line comment, Operators and brackets, Others, Single-line comment, Strings,
Task Tags)
-
Java > Editor > Content
Assist (completion proposal background, completion proposal foreground, method parameter background, method
parameter foreground, completion overwrite background, completion overwrite foreground)
-
Plug-in Development >
Editors (Text, Processing instructions, Constant strings, Tags, Comments)
Accessibility and the Windows Color
Dialog
For color selection, Eclipse uses a dialog provided by the operating system. On windows, the color selection
dialog does not respond properly to assistive technology. When you first get into the dialog, focus is on one of the
basic colors, but the dialog provides no indication of this through assistive technology. You can select colors in
Eclipse with this dialog in the following way:
- Select to customize the color of something in Eclipse, for example the color of Error Text in your Workbench
Colors and Fonts Basic preferences.
- In the color selection dialog, tab twice to go from the Basic Color matrix to the Define Custom Colors button
and press Enter.
- You can now enter the basic colors using an HSL or RGB specification according to the following definitions.
See the Windows Color Dialog Reference for a tables and values for these
colors.
Accessibility features in Eclipse
Navigating the user interface by using the keyboard
Keys
Windows Color Dialog Reference