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This is modus-themes.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.8 from
modus-themes.texi.
Copyright (C) 2020-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts
being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
“GNU Free Documentation License.”
(a) The FSFs Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and
modify this GNU manual.”
INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs misc features
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Modus Themes: (modus-themes). Elegant, highly legible and customizable themes.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Top, Next: Overview, Up: (dir)
Modus themes for GNU Emacs
**************************
Copyright (C) 2020-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts
being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
“GNU Free Documentation License.”
(a) The FSFs Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and
modify this GNU manual.”
This manual, written by Protesilaos Stavrou, describes the
customization options for the modus-operandi and modus-vivendi
themes, and provides every other piece of information pertinent to them.
The documentation furnished herein corresponds to stable version
2.3.0, released on 2022-04-01. Any reference to a newer feature which
does not yet form part of the latest tagged commit, is explicitly marked
as such.
Current development target is 2.4.0-dev.
• Homepage: <https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes>.
• Git repository: <https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/modus-themes>.
• Mailing list: <https://lists.sr.ht/~protesilaos/modus-themes>.
* Menu:
* Overview::
* Installation::
* Enable and load::
* Customization Options::
* Advanced customization::
* Face coverage::
* Notes on individual packages::
* Frequently Asked Questions::
* Contributing::
* Acknowledgements::
* Other notes about the project::
* GNU Free Documentation License::
* Indices::
— The Detailed Node Listing —
Overview
* How do the themes look like::
* Learn about the latest changes::
Installation
* Install manually from source::
* Install from the archives::
* Install on GNU/Linux::
Install on GNU/Linux
* Debian 11 Bullseye::
* GNU Guix::
Enable and load
* Sample configuration with and without use-package::
* Differences between loading and enabling::
Customization Options
* Custom reload theme:: Toggle auto-reload of the theme when setting custom variables
* Deuteranopia style:: Toggle red/blue color-coding instead of red/green
* Bold constructs:: Toggle bold constructs in code
* Italic constructs:: Toggle italic font constructs in code
* Syntax styles:: Choose the overall aesthetic of code syntax
* Mixed fonts:: Toggle mixing of font families
* Link styles:: Choose among several styles, with or without underline
* Box buttons:: Choose among several styles for buttons
* Command prompts:: Choose among plain, subtle, or intense prompts
* Mode line:: Choose among several styles, with or without borders
* Tab style:: Toggle accented background for tabs
* Completion UIs:: Choose among several styles for completion UIs
* Mail citations:: Choose among colorful, desaturated, monochrome citations
* Fringes:: Choose among invisible, subtle, or intense fringe styles
* Language checkers:: Control the style of language checkers/linters
* Line highlighting:: Choose style of current line (hl-line-mode)
* Line numbers:: Toggle subtle style for line numbers
* Mouse hover effects:: Toggle intense style for mouseover highlights
* Markup:: Choose style for markup in Org and others
* Matching parentheses:: Choose between various styles for matching delimiters/parentheses
* Active region:: Choose between various styles for the active region
* Diffs:: Choose among intense, desaturated, or background-only diffs
* Org mode blocks:: Choose among plain, gray, or tinted backgrounds
* Org agenda:: Control each element in the presentation of the agenda
* Heading styles:: Choose among several styles, also per heading level
* UI typeface:: Toggle the use of variable-pitch across the User Interface
Advanced customization
* More accurate colors in terminal emulators::
* Range of color with terminal emulators::
* Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::
* Per-theme customization settings::
* Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette::
* Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::
* Remap face with local value::
* Cycle through arbitrary colors::
* Override colors::
* Override color saturation::
* Override colors through blending::
* Font configurations for Org and others::
* Configure bold and italic faces::
* Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces::
* Custom Org emphasis faces::
* Update Org block delimiter fontification::
* Measure color contrast::
* Load theme depending on time of day::
* Backdrop for pdf-tools::
* Decrease mode line height::
* Toggle themes without reloading them::
* A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading::
* Diffs with only the foreground::
* Ediff without diff color-coding::
* Near-monochrome syntax highlighting::
Face coverage
* Supported packages:: Full list of covered face groups
* Indirectly covered packages::
Notes on individual packages
* Note on avy hints::
* Note on calendar.el weekday and weekend colors: Note on calendarel weekday and weekend colors.
* Note on underlines in compilation buffers::
* Note on inline Latex in Org buffers::
* Note on dimmer.el: Note on dimmerel.
* Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode::
* Note on highlight-parentheses.el: Note on highlight-parenthesesel.
* Note on mmm-mode.el background colors: Note on mmm-modeel background colors.
* Note for prism::
* Note for god-mode::
* Note on company-mode overlay pop-up::
* Note on ERC escaped color sequences::
* Note on powerline or spaceline::
* Note on SHR colors::
* Note on SHR fonts::
* Note on Ement colors and fonts::
* Note on Helm grep::
* Note on vc-annotate-background-mode::
* Note on pdf-tools link hints::
* Note on the Notmuch logo::
Frequently Asked Questions
* Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?::
* What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?::
* Why are colors mostly variants of blue, magenta, cyan?: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?.
* What is the best setup for legibility?::
* Are these color schemes?::
* Port the Modus themes to other platforms?::
Contributing
* Sources of the themes::
* Issues you can help with::
* Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF::
Indices
* Function index::
* Variable index::
* Concept index::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Overview, Next: Installation, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Overview
**********
The Modus themes are designed for accessible readability. They conform
with the highest standard for color contrast between any given
combination of background and foreground values. This corresponds to
the WCAG AAA standard, which specifies a minimum rate of distance in
relative luminance of 7:1.
Modus Operandi (modus-operandi) is a light theme, while Modus
Vivendi (modus-vivendi) is dark. Each themes color palette is
designed to meet the needs of the numerous interfaces that are possible
in the Emacs computing environment.
The overarching objective of this project is to always offer
accessible color combinations. There shall never be a compromise on
this principle. If there arises an inescapable trade-off between
readability and stylistic considerations, we will always opt for the
former.
To ensure that users have a consistently accessible experience, the
themes strive to achieve as close to full face coverage as possible
(*note Face coverage::).
Furthermore, the themes are designed to empower users with red-green
color deficiency (deuteranopia). This is achieved in three ways:
1. The conformance with the highest legibility standard means that
text is always readable no matter the perception of its hue.
2. Most contexts use colors on the blue-cyan-magenta-purple side of
the spectrum. Put differently, green and/or red are seldom used,
thus minimizing the potential for confusion.
*note Why are colors mostly variants of blue, magenta, cyan?: Why
are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?.
3. In contexts where a red/green color-coding is unavoidable, we
provide a universal toggle to customize the themes so that a
red/blue scheme is used instead.
*note Option for red-green color deficiency or deuteranopia:
Deuteranopia style.
Starting with version 0.12.0 and onwards, the themes are built into
GNU Emacs.
* Menu:
* How do the themes look like::
* Learn about the latest changes::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: How do the themes look like, Next: Learn about the latest changes, Up: Overview
1.1 How do the themes look like
===============================
Check the web page with the screen shots
(https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes-pictures/). There are lots
of scenarios on display that draw attention to details and important
aspects in the design of the themes. They also showcase the numerous
customization options.
*note Customization options: Customization Options.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Learn about the latest changes, Prev: How do the themes look like, Up: Overview
1.2 Learn about the latest changes
==================================
Please refer to the web page with the change log
(https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes-changelog). It is
comprehensive and covers everything that goes into every tagged release
of the themes.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Installation, Next: Enable and load, Prev: Overview, Up: Top
2 Installation
**************
The Modus themes are distributed with Emacs starting with version 28.1.
On older versions of Emacs, they can be installed using Emacs package
manager or manually from their code repository. There also exist
packages for distributions of GNU/Linux.
* Menu:
* Install manually from source::
* Install from the archives::
* Install on GNU/Linux::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Install manually from source, Next: Install from the archives, Up: Installation
2.1 Install manually from source
================================
In the following example, we are assuming that your Emacs files are
stored in ~/.emacs.d and that you want to place the Modus themes in
~/.emacs.d/modus-themes.
1. Get the source and store it in the desired path by running the
following in the command line shell:
$ git clone https://gitlab.com/protesilaos/modus-themes.git ~/.emacs.d/modus-themes
1. Add that path to your known Elisp libraries list, by placing this
snippet of Emacs Lisp in your init file (e.g. init.el):
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/modus-themes")
The themes are now ready to be used: *note Enable and load::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Install from the archives, Next: Install on GNU/Linux, Prev: Install manually from source, Up: Installation
2.2 Install from the archives
=============================
The modus-themes package is available from the GNU ELPA archive, which
is configured by default.
Prior to querying any package archive, make sure to have updated the
index, with M-x package-refresh-contents. Then all you need to do is
type M-x package-install and specify the modus-themes.
Note that older versions of the themes used to be distributed as
standalone packages. This practice has been discontinued starting with
version 1.0.0 of this project.
Once installed, the themes are ready to be used: *note Enable and
load::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Install on GNU/Linux, Prev: Install from the archives, Up: Installation
2.3 Install on GNU/Linux
========================
The themes are also available from the archives of some distributions of
GNU/Linux. These should correspond to a tagged release rather than
building directly from the latest Git commit. It all depends on the
distros packaging policies.
* Menu:
* Debian 11 Bullseye::
* GNU Guix::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Debian 11 Bullseye, Next: GNU Guix, Up: Install on GNU/Linux
2.3.1 Debian 11 Bullseye
------------------------
The themes are part of Debian 11 Bullseye. Get them with:
sudo apt install elpa-modus-themes
They are now ready to be used: *note Enable and load::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: GNU Guix, Prev: Debian 11 Bullseye, Up: Install on GNU/Linux
2.3.2 GNU Guix
--------------
Users of Guix can get the themes with this command:
guix package -i emacs-modus-themes
They are now ready to be used: *note Enable and load::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Enable and load, Next: Customization Options, Prev: Installation, Up: Top
3 Enable and load
*****************
Users of the built-in themes cannot require the package as usual
because there is no package to speak of. Instead, things are simpler as
all one needs is to load the theme of their preference by adding either
form to their init file:
(load-theme 'modus-operandi) ; Light theme
(load-theme 'modus-vivendi) ; Dark theme
Users of packaged variants of the themes must add a few more lines to
ensure that everything works as intended. First, one has to require the
main library before loading either theme:
(require 'modus-themes)
Then it is recommended to load the individual theme files with the
helper function modus-themes-load-themes:
;; Load the theme files before enabling a theme (else you get an error).
(modus-themes-load-themes)
Once the libraries that define the themes are enabled, one can
activate a theme with either of the following expressions:
(modus-themes-load-operandi) ; Light theme
;; OR
(modus-themes-load-vivendi) ; Dark theme
Changes to the available customization options must always be
evaluated before loading a theme (*note Customization Options::). An
exception to this norm is when using the various Custom interfaces or
with commands like M-x customize-set-variable, which can optionally
automatically reload the theme (*note Option for inhibiting theme
reload: Custom reload theme.).
This is how a basic setup could look like:
;;; For the built-in themes which cannot use `require':
;; Add all your customizations prior to loading the themes
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))
;; Load the theme of your choice:
(load-theme 'modus-operandi) ;; OR (load-theme 'modus-vivendi)
(define-key global-map (kbd "<f5>") #'modus-themes-toggle)
;;; For packaged versions which must use `require':
(require 'modus-themes)
;; Add all your customizations prior to loading the themes
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))
;; Load the theme files before enabling a theme
(modus-themes-load-themes)
;; Load the theme of your choice:
(modus-themes-load-operandi) ;; OR (modus-themes-load-vivendi)
(define-key global-map (kbd "<f5>") #'modus-themes-toggle)
*note Sample configuration with and without use-package::.
With those granted, bear in mind a couple of technical points on
modus-themes-load-operandi and modus-themes-load-vivendi, as well as
modus-themes-toggle which relies on them:
1. Those functions call load-theme. Some users prefer to opt for
enable-theme instead (*note Differences between loading and
enabling::).
2. The functions will run the modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook as
their final step. This can be employed for bespoke configurations
(*note Advanced customization::). Experienced users may not wish
to rely on such a hook and the functions that run it: they may
prefer a custom solution (*note A theme-agnostic hook for theme
loading::).
* Menu:
* Sample configuration with and without use-package::
* Differences between loading and enabling::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Sample configuration with and without use-package, Next: Differences between loading and enabling, Up: Enable and load
3.1 Sample configuration with and without use-package
=====================================================
It is common for Emacs users to rely on use-package for declaring
package configurations in their setup. We use this as an example:
;;; For the built-in themes which cannot use `require':
(use-package emacs
:init
;; Add all your customizations prior to loading the themes
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))
:config
;; Load the theme of your choice:
(load-theme 'modus-operandi) ;; OR (load-theme 'modus-vivendi)
:bind ("<f5>" . modus-themes-toggle)
;;; For packaged versions which must use `require':
(use-package modus-themes
:ensure
:init
;; Add all your customizations prior to loading the themes
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))
;; Load the theme files before enabling a theme
(modus-themes-load-themes)
:config
;; Load the theme of your choice:
(modus-themes-load-operandi) ;; OR (modus-themes-load-vivendi)
:bind ("<f5>" . modus-themes-toggle))
The same without use-package:
;;; For the built-in themes which cannot use `require':
;; Add all your customizations prior to loading the themes
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))
;; Load the theme of your choice:
(load-theme 'modus-operandi) ;; OR (load-theme 'modus-vivendi)
(define-key global-map (kbd "<f5>") #'modus-themes-toggle)
;;; For packaged versions which must use `require':
(require 'modus-themes)
;; Add all your customizations prior to loading the themes
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))
;; Load the theme files before enabling a theme
(modus-themes-load-themes)
;; Load the theme of your choice:
(modus-themes-load-operandi) ;; OR (modus-themes-load-vivendi)
(define-key global-map (kbd "<f5>") #'modus-themes-toggle)
*note Differences between loading and enabling::.
Note: make sure not to customize the variable
custom-theme-load-path or custom-theme-directory after the themes
package declaration. That will lead to failures in loading the files.
If either or both of those variables need to be changed, their values
should be defined before the package declaration of the themes.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Differences between loading and enabling, Prev: Sample configuration with and without use-package, Up: Enable and load
3.2 Differences between loading and enabling
============================================
The reason we recommend load-theme instead of the other option of
enable-theme is that the former does a kind of “reset” on the face
specs. It quite literally loads (or reloads) the theme. Whereas the
latter simply puts an already loaded theme at the top of the list of
enabled items, re-using whatever state was last loaded.
As such, load-theme reads all customizations that may happen during
any given Emacs session: even after the initial setup of a theme.
Examples are calls to custom-set-faces, as well as new values assigned
to the options the Modus themes provide (*note Customization Options::).
Our tests show that enable-theme does not read such variables anew,
so it might appear to the unsuspecting user that the themes are somehow
broken whenever they try to assign a new value to a customization option
or some face.
This “reset” that load-theme brings about does, however, come at
the cost of being somewhat slower than enable-theme. Users who have a
stable setup and who seldom update their variables during a given Emacs
session, are better off using something like this:
(require 'modus-themes)
(load-theme 'modus-operandi t t)
(load-theme 'modus-vivendi t t)
(enable-theme 'modus-operandi) ;; OR (enable-theme 'modus-vivendi)
*note Toggle themes without reloading them::.
*note Sample configuration with and without use-package::.
With the above granted, other sections of the manual discuss how to
configure custom faces, where load-theme is expected, though
enable-theme could still apply in stable setups:
*note Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette::.
*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Customization Options, Next: Advanced customization, Prev: Enable and load, Up: Top
4 Customization Options
***********************
The Modus themes are highly configurable, though they should work well
without any further tweaks. By default, all customization options are
set to nil, unless otherwise noted in this manual.
Remember that all customization options must be evaluated before
loading a theme (*note Enable and load::). If the theme is already
active, it must be reloaded for changes in user options to come into
force.
Below is a summary of what you will learn in the subsequent sections
of this manual.
(setq modus-themes-italic-constructs t
modus-themes-bold-constructs nil
modus-themes-mixed-fonts nil
modus-themes-subtle-line-numbers nil
modus-themes-intense-mouseovers nil
modus-themes-deuteranopia t
modus-themes-tabs-accented t
modus-themes-variable-pitch-ui nil
modus-themes-inhibit-reload t ; only applies to `customize-set-variable' and related
modus-themes-fringes nil ; {nil,'subtle,'intense}
;; Options for `modus-themes-lang-checkers' are either nil (the
;; default), or a list of properties that may include any of those
;; symbols: `straight-underline', `text-also', `background',
;; `intense' OR `faint'.
modus-themes-lang-checkers nil
;; Options for `modus-themes-mode-line' are either nil, or a list
;; that can combine any of `3d' OR `moody', `borderless',
;; `accented', a natural number for extra padding (or a cons cell
;; of padding and NATNUM), and a floating point for the height of
;; the text relative to the base font size (or a cons cell of
;; height and FLOAT)
modus-themes-mode-line '(accented borderless (padding . 4) (height . 0.9))
;; Same as above:
;; modus-themes-mode-line '(accented borderless 4 0.9)
;; Options for `modus-themes-markup' are either nil, or a list
;; that can combine any of `bold', `italic', `background',
;; `intense'.
modus-themes-markup '(background italic)
;; Options for `modus-themes-syntax' are either nil (the default),
;; or a list of properties that may include any of those symbols:
;; `faint', `yellow-comments', `green-strings', `alt-syntax'
modus-themes-syntax nil
;; Options for `modus-themes-hl-line' are either nil (the default),
;; or a list of properties that may include any of those symbols:
;; `accented', `underline', `intense'
modus-themes-hl-line '(underline accented)
;; Options for `modus-themes-paren-match' are either nil (the
;; default), or a list of properties that may include any of those
;; symbols: `bold', `intense', `underline'
modus-themes-paren-match '(bold intense)
;; Options for `modus-themes-links' are either nil (the default),
;; or a list of properties that may include any of those symbols:
;; `neutral-underline' OR `no-underline', `faint' OR `no-color',
;; `bold', `italic', `background'
modus-themes-links '(neutral-underline background)
;; Options for `modus-themes-box-buttons' are either nil (the
;; default), or a list that can combine any of `flat', `accented',
;; `faint', `variable-pitch', `underline', `all-buttons', the
;; symbol of any font weight as listed in `modus-themes-weights',
;; and a floating point number (e.g. 0.9) for the height of the
;; button's text.
modus-themes-box-buttons '(variable-pitch flat faint 0.9)
;; Options for `modus-themes-prompts' are either nil (the
;; default), or a list of properties that may include any of those
;; symbols: `background', `bold', `gray', `intense', `italic'
modus-themes-prompts '(intense bold)
;; The `modus-themes-completions' is an alist that reads three
;; keys: `matches', `selection', `popup'. Each accepts a nil
;; value (or empty list) or a list of properties that can include
;; any of the following (for WEIGHT read further below):
;;
;; `matches' - `background', `intense', `underline', `italic', WEIGHT
;; `selection' - `accented', `intense', `underline', `italic', `text-also' WEIGHT
;; `popup' - same as `selected'
;; `t' - applies to any key not explicitly referenced (check docs)
;;
;; WEIGHT is a symbol such as `semibold', `light', or anything
;; covered in `modus-themes-weights'. Bold is used in the absence
;; of an explicit WEIGHT.
modus-themes-completions '((matches . (extrabold))
(selection . (semibold accented))
(popup . (accented intense)))
modus-themes-mail-citations nil ; {nil,'intense,'faint,'monochrome}
;; Options for `modus-themes-region' are either nil (the default),
;; or a list of properties that may include any of those symbols:
;; `no-extend', `bg-only', `accented'
modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend)
;; Options for `modus-themes-diffs': nil, 'desaturated, 'bg-only
modus-themes-diffs 'desaturated
modus-themes-org-blocks 'gray-background ; {nil,'gray-background,'tinted-background}
modus-themes-org-agenda ; this is an alist: read the manual or its doc string
'((header-block . (variable-pitch 1.3))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic bold-today 1.1))
(event . (accented varied))
(scheduled . uniform)
(habit . traffic-light))
modus-themes-headings ; this is an alist: read the manual or its doc string
'((1 . (overline background variable-pitch 1.3))
(2 . (rainbow overline 1.1))
(t . (semibold))))
* Menu:
* Custom reload theme:: Toggle auto-reload of the theme when setting custom variables
* Deuteranopia style:: Toggle red/blue color-coding instead of red/green
* Bold constructs:: Toggle bold constructs in code
* Italic constructs:: Toggle italic font constructs in code
* Syntax styles:: Choose the overall aesthetic of code syntax
* Mixed fonts:: Toggle mixing of font families
* Link styles:: Choose among several styles, with or without underline
* Box buttons:: Choose among several styles for buttons
* Command prompts:: Choose among plain, subtle, or intense prompts
* Mode line:: Choose among several styles, with or without borders
* Tab style:: Toggle accented background for tabs
* Completion UIs:: Choose among several styles for completion UIs
* Mail citations:: Choose among colorful, desaturated, monochrome citations
* Fringes:: Choose among invisible, subtle, or intense fringe styles
* Language checkers:: Control the style of language checkers/linters
* Line highlighting:: Choose style of current line (hl-line-mode)
* Line numbers:: Toggle subtle style for line numbers
* Mouse hover effects:: Toggle intense style for mouseover highlights
* Markup:: Choose style for markup in Org and others
* Matching parentheses:: Choose between various styles for matching delimiters/parentheses
* Active region:: Choose between various styles for the active region
* Diffs:: Choose among intense, desaturated, or background-only diffs
* Org mode blocks:: Choose among plain, gray, or tinted backgrounds
* Org agenda:: Control each element in the presentation of the agenda
* Heading styles:: Choose among several styles, also per heading level
* UI typeface:: Toggle the use of variable-pitch across the User Interface

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Custom reload theme, Next: Deuteranopia style, Up: Customization Options
4.1 Option for inhibiting theme reload
======================================
Brief: Toggle reloading of the active theme when an option is changed
through the Customize UI.
Symbol: modus-themes-inhibit-reload (boolean type)
Possible values:
1. nil
2. t (default)
By default, customizing a theme-related user option through the
Custom interfaces or with M-x customize-set-variable will not reload
the currently active Modus theme.
Enable this behaviour by setting this variable to nil.
Regardless of this option, the active theme must be reloaded for
changes to user options to take effect (*note Enable and load::).

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Deuteranopia style, Next: Bold constructs, Prev: Custom reload theme, Up: Customization Options
4.2 Option for red-green color deficiency or deuteranopia
=========================================================
Brief: When non-nil use red/blue color-coding instead of red/green,
where appropriate.
Symbol: modus-themes-deuteranopia (boolean type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. t
This is to account for red-green color deficiency, also know as
deuteranopia and variants. It applies to all contexts where there can
be a color-coded distinction between failure or success, a to-do or done
state, a mark for deletion versus a mark for selection (e.g. in Dired),
current and lazily highlighted search matches, removed lines in diffs as
opposed to added ones, and so on.
Note that this does not change all colors throughout the active
theme, but only applies to cases that have color-coding significance.
For example, regular code syntax highlighting is not affected. There is
no such need because of the themes overarching commitment to the
highest legibility standard, which ensures that text is readable
regardless of hue, as well as the predominance of colors on the
blue-cyan-magenta-purple side of the spectrum.
*note Why are colors mostly variants of blue, magenta, cyan?: Why are
colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Bold constructs, Next: Italic constructs, Prev: Deuteranopia style, Up: Customization Options
4.3 Option for more bold constructs
===================================
Brief: Use bold for code syntax highlighting and related.
Symbol: modus-themes-bold-constructs (boolean type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. t
The default is to use a bold typographic weight only when it is
required.
With a non-nil value (t) display several syntactic constructs in
bold weight. This concerns keywords and other important aspects of code
syntax. It also affects certain mode line indicators and command-line
prompts.
Advanced users may also want to configure the exact attributes of the
bold face.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Italic constructs, Next: Syntax styles, Prev: Bold constructs, Up: Customization Options
4.4 Option for more italic constructs
=====================================
Brief: Use italics for code syntax highlighting and related.
Symbol: modus-themes-italic-constructs (boolean type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. t
The default is to not use slanted text forms (italics) unless it is
absolutely necessary.
With a non-nil value (t) choose to render more faces in italics.
This typically affects documentation strings and code comments.
Advanced users may also want to configure the exact attributes of the
italic face.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Syntax styles, Next: Mixed fonts, Prev: Italic constructs, Up: Customization Options
4.5 Option for syntax highlighting
==================================
Brief: Set the overall style of code syntax highlighting.
Symbol: modus-themes-syntax (choice type, list of properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
faint
yellow-comments
green-strings
alt-syntax
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is to use a balanced
combination of colors on the cyan-blue-magenta side of the spectrum.
There is little to no use of greens, yellows, and reds. Comments are
gray, strings are blue colored, doc strings are a shade of cyan, while
color combinations are designed to avoid exaggerations.
The property faint fades the saturation of all applicable colors,
where that is possible or appropriate.
The property yellow-comments applies a yellow color to comments.
The property green-strings applies a green color to strings and a
green tint to doc strings.
The property alt-syntax changes the combination of colors beyond
strings and comments, so that the effective palette is broadened to
provide greater variety relative to the default.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(faint)
(green-strings yellow-comments)
(alt-syntax green-strings yellow-comments)
(faint alt-syntax green-strings yellow-comments)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-syntax '(faint alt-syntax))
Independent of this variable, users may also control the use of a
bold weight or italic text: modus-themes-bold-constructs and
modus-themes-italic-constructs.
*note Option for more bold constructs: Bold constructs.
*note Option for more italic constructs: Italic constructs.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Mixed fonts, Next: Link styles, Prev: Syntax styles, Up: Customization Options
4.6 Option for font mixing
==========================
Brief: Toggle the use of monospaced fonts for spacing-sensitive
constructs (affects font families).
Symbol: modus-themes-mixed-fonts (boolean type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. t
When set to non-nil (t), configure some spacing-sensitive faces
like Org tables and code blocks to always inherit from the fixed-pitch
face. This is to ensure that certain constructs like code blocks and
tables remain monospaced even when users opt for a mode that remaps
typeface families, such as the built-in M-x variable-pitch-mode.
Otherwise the layout would appear broken, due to how spacing is done.
For a consistent experience, user may need to specify the font family
of the fixed-pitch face.
*note Font configurations for Org and others::.
Furthermore, users may prefer to use another package for handling
mixed typeface configurations, rather than letting the theme do it,
perhaps because a purpose-specific package has extra functionality. Two
possible options are org-variable-pitch and mixed-pitch.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Link styles, Next: Box buttons, Prev: Mixed fonts, Up: Customization Options
4.7 Option for links
====================
Brief: Control the style of links to web pages, files, buffers...
Symbol: modus-themes-links (choice type, list of properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
• Underline style:
neutral-underline
no-underline
• Text coloration:
faint
no-color
bold
italic
background
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is a prominent text
color, typically blue, with an underline of the same color.
For the style of the underline, a neutral-underline property turns
the color of the line into a subtle gray, while the no-underline
property removes the line altogether. If both of those are set, the
latter takes precedence.
For text coloration, a faint property desaturates the color of the
text and the underline, unless the underline is affected by the
aforementioned properties. While a no-color property removes the
color from the text. If both of those are set, the latter takes
precedence.
A bold property applies a heavy typographic weight to the text of
the link.
An italic property adds a slant to the links text (italic or
oblique forms, depending on the typeface).
A background property applies a subtle tinted background color.
In case both no-underline and no-color are set, then a subtle
gray background is applied to all links. This can still be combined
with the bold and italic properties.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(faint)
(no-underline faint)
(no-color no-underline bold)
(italic bold background no-color no-underline)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-links '(neutral-underline background))
The placement of the underline, meaning its proximity to the text, is
controlled by x-use-underline-position-properties,
x-underline-at-descent-line, underline-minimum-offset. Please refer
to their documentation strings.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Box buttons, Next: Command prompts, Prev: Link styles, Up: Customization Options
4.8 Option for box buttons
==========================
Brief: Control the style of buttons in the Custom UI and related.
Symbol: modus-themes-box-buttons (choice type, list of
properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
flat
accented
faint
variable-pitch
underline
• A font weight, which must be supported by the underlying typeface:
thin
ultralight
extralight
light
semilight
regular
medium
semibold
bold
heavy
extrabold
ultrabold
• A floating point as a height multiple of the default or a cons cell
in the form of (height . FLOAT)
all-buttons
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is a gray background
combined with a pseudo three-dimensional effect.
The flat property makes the button two dimensional.
The accented property changes the background from gray to an accent
color.
The faint property reduces the overall coloration.
The variable-pitch property applies a proportionately spaced
typeface to the button~s text.
*note Font configurations for Org and others::.
The underline property draws a line below the affected text and
removes whatever box effect. This is optimal when Emacs runs inside a
terminal emulator (*note More accurate colors in terminal emulators::).
If flat and underline are defined together, the latter takes
precedence.
The symbol of a weight attribute adjusts the font of the button
accordingly, such as light, semibold, etc. Valid symbols are
defined in the variable modus-themes-weights.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.
A number, expressed as a floating point (e.g. 0.9), adjusts the
height of the buttons text to that many times the base font size. The
default height is the same as 1.0, though it need not be explicitly
stated. Instead of a floating point, an acceptable value can be in the
form of a cons cell like (height . FLOAT) or (height FLOAT), where
FLOAT is the given number.
The all-buttons property extends the box button effect (or the
aforementioned properties) to the faces of the generic widget library.
By default, those do not look like the buttons of the Custom UI as they
are ordinary text wrapped in square brackets.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(flat)
(variable-pitch flat)
(variable-pitch flat semibold 0.9)
(variable-pitch flat semibold (height 0.9)) ; same as above
(variable-pitch flat semibold (height . 0.9)) ; same as above
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-box-buttons '(variable-pitch flat 0.9))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Command prompts, Next: Mode line, Prev: Box buttons, Up: Customization Options
4.9 Option for command prompt styles
====================================
Brief: Control the style of command prompts (e.g. minibuffer, shell,
IRC clients).
Symbol: modus-themes-prompts (choice type, list of properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
background
bold
gray
intense
italic
The default (a nil value or an empty list) means to only use a
subtle accented foreground color.
The property background applies a background color to the prompts
text. By default, this is a subtle accented value.
The property intense makes the foreground color more prominent. If
the background property is also set, it amplifies the value of the
background as well.
The property gray changes the prompts colors to grayscale. This
affects the foreground and, if the background property is also set,
the background. Its effect is subtle, unless it is combined with the
intense property.
The property bold makes the text use a bold typographic weight.
Similarly, italic adds a slant to the fonts forms (italic or oblique
forms, depending on the typeface).
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(intense)
(bold intense)
(intense bold gray)
(intense background gray bold)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-prompts '(background gray))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Mode line, Next: Tab style, Prev: Command prompts, Up: Customization Options
4.10 Option for mode line presentation
======================================
Brief: Control the style of the mode lines.
Symbol: modus-themes-mode-line (choice type, list of properties)
Possible values, which can be expressed as a list of combinations of
box effect, color, and border visibility:
• Overall style:
3d
moody
accented
borderless
• A natural number > 1 for extra padding or a cons cell in the form
of (padding . NATNUM).
• A floating point to set the height of the mode lines text. It can
also be a cons cell in the form of (height . FLOAT).
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is a two-dimensional
rectangle with a border around it. The active and the inactive mode
lines use different shades of grayscale values for the background,
foreground, border.
The 3d property applies a three-dimensional effect to the active
mode line. The inactive mode lines remain two-dimensional and are toned
down a bit, relative to the default style.
The moody property optimizes the mode line for use with the library
of the same name (hereinafter referred to as Moody). In practice, it
removes the box effect and replaces it with underline and overline
properties. It also tones down the inactive mode lines. Despite its
intended purpose, this option can also be used without the Moody library
(please consult the themes manual on this point for more details). If
both 3d and moody properties are set, the latter takes precedence.
The borderless property removes the color of the borders. It does
not actually remove the borders, but only makes their color the same as
the background, effectively creating some padding.
The accented property ensures that the active mode line uses a
colored background instead of the standard shade of gray.
A positive integer (natural number or natnum) applies a padding
effect of NATNUM pixels at the boundaries of the mode lines. The
default value is 1 and does not need to be specified explicitly. The
padding has no effect when the moody property is also used, because
Moody already applies its own tweaks. To ensure that the underline is
placed at the bottom of the mode line, set x-underline-at-descent-line
to non-nil (this is not needed when the borderless property is also
set). For users on Emacs 29, the x-use-underline-position-properties
variable must also be set to nil.
The padding can also be expressed as a cons cell in the form of
(padding . NATNUM) or (padding NATNUM) where the key is constant and
NATNUM is the desired natural number.
A floating point applies an adjusted height to the mode lines text
as a multiple of the main font size. The default rate is 1.0 and does
not need to be specified. Apart from a floating point, the height may
also be expressed as a cons cell in the form of (height . FLOAT) or
(height FLOAT) where the key is constant and the FLOAT is the desired
number.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(accented)
(borderless 3d)
(moody accented borderless)
Same as above, using the padding and height as an example (these all
yield the same result):
(accented borderless 4 0.9)
(accented borderless (padding . 4) (height . 0.9))
(accented borderless (padding 4) (height 0.9))
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-mode-line '(borderless accented))
Note that Moody does not expose any faces that the themes could style
directly. Instead it re-purposes existing ones to render its tabs and
ribbons. As such, there may be cases where the contrast ratio falls
below the 7:1 target that the themes conform with (WCAG AAA). To hedge
against this, we configure a fallback foreground for the moody
property, which will come into effect when the background of the mode
line changes to something less accessible, such as Moody ribbons (read
the doc string of set-face-attribute, specifically
:distant-foreground). This fallback is activated when Emacs
determines that the background and foreground of the given construct are
too close to each other in terms of color distance. In practice, users
will need to experiment with the variable
face-near-same-color-threshold to trigger the effect. We find that a
value of 45000 shall suffice, contrary to the default 30000. Though
for the combinations that involve the accented and moody properties,
as mentioned above, that should be raised up to 70000. Do not set it
too high, because it has the adverse effect of always overriding the
default colors (which have been carefully designed to be highly
accessible).
Furthermore, because Moody expects an underline and overline instead
of a box style, it is strongly advised to set
x-underline-at-descent-line to a non-nil value.
Finally, note that various packages which heavily modify the mode
line, such as doom-modeline, nano-modeline, powerline, spaceline
may not look as intended with all possible combinations of this user
option.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Tab style, Next: Completion UIs, Prev: Mode line, Up: Customization Options
4.11 Option for accented background in tab interfaces
=====================================================
Brief: Toggle accent colors for tabbed interfaces.
Symbol: modus-themes-tabs-accented (boolean type)
Possible values:
nil (default)
t
By default, all tab interfaces use backgrounds which are shades of
gray. When this option is set to non-nil, the backgrounds become
colorful.
This affects the built-in tab-bar-mode and tab-line-mode, as well
as the Centaur tabs package.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Completion UIs, Next: Mail citations, Prev: Tab style, Up: Customization Options
4.12 Option for completion framework aesthetics
===============================================
Brief: Set the overall style of completion framework interfaces.
Symbol: modus-themes-completions (alist type properties)
This affects Company, Corfu, Flx, Helm, Icomplete/Fido, Ido, Ivy,
Mct, Orderless, Selectrum, Vertico. The value is an alist that takes
the form of a (key . properties) combination. Here is a sample,
followed by a description of the particularities:
(setq modus-themes-completions
'((matches . (extrabold background intense))
(selection . (semibold accented intense))
(popup . (accented))))
The matches key refers to the highlighted characters that
correspond to the users input. By default (nil or an empty list), they
have a bold weight and a colored foreground. The list of properties may
include any of the following symbols regardless of the order they may
appear in:
background to add a background color;
intense to increase the overall coloration (also amplifies the
background, if present);
underline to draw a line below the characters;
italic to use a slanted font (italic or oblique forms);
• The symbol of a font weight attribute such as light, semibold,
et cetera. Valid symbols are defined in the modus-themes-weights
variable. The absence of a weight means that bold will be used.
The selection key applies to the current line or currently matched
candidate, depending on the specifics of the User Interface. By default
(nil or an empty list), it has a subtle gray background, a bold weight,
and the base foreground value for the text. The list of properties it
accepts is as follows (order is not significant):
accented to make the background colorful instead of gray;
text-also to apply extra color to the text of the selected line;
intense to increase the overall coloration;
underline to draw a line below the characters;
italic to use a slanted font (italic or oblique forms);
• The symbol of a font weight attribute such as light, semibold,
et cetera. Valid symbols are defined in the modus-themes-weights
variable. The absence of a weight means that bold will be used.
The popup key takes the same values as selection.
Apart from specfying each key separately, a fallback list is
accepted. This is only useful when the desired aesthetic is the same
across all keys that are not explicitly referenced. For example, this:
(setq modus-themes-completions
'((t . (extrabold intense))))
Is the same as:
(setq modus-themes-completions
'((matches . (extrabold intense))
(selection . (extrabold intense))
(popup . (extrabold intense))))
In the case of the fallback, any property that does not apply to the
corresponding key is simply ignored (matches does not have accented
and text-also, while selection and popup do not have
background).
A concise expression of those associations can be written as follows,
where the car is always the key and the cdr is the list of
properties (whatever order they may appear in):
(setq modus-themes-completions
'((matches extrabold background intense)
(selection semibold accented intense)
(popup accented)))
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.
Also refer to the Orderless documentation for its intersection with
Company (if you choose to use those in tandem).

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Mail citations, Next: Fringes, Prev: Completion UIs, Up: Customization Options
4.13 Option for mail citations
==============================
Brief: Set the overall style of citations/quotes when composing emails.
Symbol: modus-themes-mail-citations (choice type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. intense
3. faint
4. monochrome
By default (a nil value) citations are styled with contrasting hues
to denote their depth. Colors are easy to tell apart because they
complement each other, but they otherwise are not very prominent.
Option intense is similar to the default in terms of using
contrasting and complementary hues, but applies more saturated colors.
Option faint maintains the same color-based distinction between
citation levels though the colors it uses have subtle differences
between them.
Option monochrome turns all quotes into a shade of gray.
Whatever the value assigned to this variable, citations in emails are
controlled by typographic elements or indentation, which the themes do
not touch.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Fringes, Next: Language checkers, Prev: Mail citations, Up: Customization Options
4.14 Option for fringe visibility
=================================
Brief: Control the overall coloration of the fringes.
Symbol: modus-themes-fringes (choice type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. subtle
3. intense
The default is to use the same color as that of the main background,
meaning that the fringes are not obvious though they still occupy the
space given to them by fringe-mode.
Options subtle and intense apply a gray background, making the
fringes visible. The difference between the two is one of degree, as
their names imply.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Language checkers, Next: Line highlighting, Prev: Fringes, Up: Customization Options
4.15 Option for language checkers
=================================
Brief: Control the style of in-buffer warnings and errors produced by
spell checkers, code linters, and the like.
Symbol: modus-themes-lang-checkers (choice type, list of
properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
straight-underline
text-also
background
• Overall coloration:
intense
faint
The default (a nil value or an empty list) applies a color-coded
underline to the affected text, while it leaves the original foreground
intact. If the display spec of Emacs has support for it, the
underlines style is that of a wave, otherwise it is a straight line.
The property straight-underline ensures that the underline under
the affected text is always drawn as a straight line.
The property text-also applies the same color of the underline to
the affected text.
The property background adds a color-coded background.
The property intense amplifies the applicable colors if
background and/or text-also are set. If intense is set on its
own, then it implies text-also.
The property faint uses nuanced colors for the underline and for
the foreground when text-also is included. If both faint and
intense are specified, the former takes precedence.
Combinations of any of those properties can be expressed in a list,
as in those examples:
(background)
(straight-underline intense)
(background text-also straight-underline)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-lang-checkers '(text-also background))
NOTE: The placement of the straight underline, though not the wave
style, is controlled by the built-in variables
underline-minimum-offset, x-underline-at-descent-line,
x-use-underline-position-properties.
To disable fringe indicators for Flymake or Flycheck, refer to
variables flymake-fringe-indicator-position and
flycheck-indication-mode, respectively.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Line highlighting, Next: Line numbers, Prev: Language checkers, Up: Customization Options
4.16 Option for line highlighting
=================================
Brief: Control the style of the current line of hl-line-mode.
Symbol: modus-themes-hl-line (choice type, list of properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
accented
intense
underline
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is a subtle gray
background color.
The property accented changes the background to a colored variant.
An underline property draws a line below the highlighted area. Its
color is similar to the background, so gray by default or an accent
color when accented is also set.
An intense property amplifies the colors in use, which may be both
the background and the underline.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(intense)
(underline intense)
(accented intense underline)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-hl-line '(underline accented))
Set x-underline-at-descent-line to a non-nil value for better
results with underlines.
This style affects several packages that enable hl-line-mode, such
as elfeed, notmuch, and mu4e.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Line numbers, Next: Mouse hover effects, Prev: Line highlighting, Up: Customization Options
4.17 Option for line numbers
============================
Brief: Toggle subtle line numbers.
Symbol: modus-themes-subtle-line-numbers (boolean type)
Possible value:
1. nil (default)
2. t
The default style for display-line-numbers-mode and its global
variant is to apply a subtle gray background to the line numbers. The
current line has a more pronounced background and foreground combination
to bring more attention to itself.
Similarly, the faces for display-line-numbers-major-tick and its
counterpart display-line-numbers-minor-tick use appropriate styles
that involve a bespoke background and foreground combination.
With a non-nil value (t), line numbers have no background of their
own. Instead they retain the primary background of the theme, blending
with the rest of the buffer. Foreground values for all relevant faces
are updated to accommodate this aesthetic.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Mouse hover effects, Next: Markup, Prev: Line numbers, Up: Customization Options
4.18 Option for mouseover effects
=================================
Brief: Toggle intense mouse hover effects.
Symbol: modus-themes-intense-mouseovers (boolean type)
Possible value:
1. nil (default)
2. t
By default all mouseover effects apply a highlight with a subtle
colored background. When non-nil, these have a more pronounced effect.
Note that this affects the generic highlight which, strictly
speaking, is not limited to mouse usage.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Markup, Next: Matching parentheses, Prev: Mouse hover effects, Up: Customization Options
4.19 Option for markup style in Org and others
==============================================
Brief: Choose style of markup in Org, Markdown, and others (affects
constructs such as Orgs =verbatim= and ~code~).
Symbol: modus-themes-markup (boolean type)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
1. bold
2. italic
3. background
4. intense
The italic property applies a typographic slant (italics).
The bold property applies a heavier typographic weight.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.
The background property adds a background color. The background is
a shade of gray, unless the intense property is also set.
The intense property amplifies the existing coloration. When
background is used, the background color is enhanced as well and
becomes tinted instead of being gray.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(bold)
(bold italic)
(bold italic intense)
(bold italic intense background)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-markup '(bold italic))
Also check the variables org-hide-emphasis-markers,
org-hide-macro-markers.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Matching parentheses, Next: Active region, Prev: Markup, Up: Customization Options
4.20 Option for parenthesis matching
====================================
Brief: Control the style of matching delimiters produced by
show-paren-mode.
Symbol: modus-themes-paren-match (choice type, list of
properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
bold
intense
underline
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is a subtle background
color.
The bold property adds a bold weight to the characters of the
matching delimiters.
The intense property applies a more prominent background color to
the delimiters.
The underline property draws a straight line under the affected
text.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(bold)
(underline intense)
(bold intense underline)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-paren-match '(bold intense))
This customization variable affects the built-in show-paren-mode
and the smartparens package.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Active region, Next: Diffs, Prev: Matching parentheses, Up: Customization Options
4.21 Option for active region
=============================
Brief: Control the style of the region.
Symbol: modus-themes-region (choice type, list of properties)
Possible values are expressed as a list of properties (default is
nil or an empty list). The list can include any of the following
symbols:
no-extend
bg-only
accented
The default (a nil value or an empty list) is a prominent gray
background that overrides all foreground colors in the area it
encompasses. Its reach extends to the edge of the window.
The no-extend property limits the region to the end of the line, so
that it does not reach the edge of the window.
The bg-only property makes the regions background color more
subtle to allow the underlying text to retain its foreground colors.
The accented property applies a more colorful background to the
region.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(no-extend)
(bg-only accented)
(accented bg-only no-extend)
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-region '(bg-only no-extend))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Diffs, Next: Org mode blocks, Prev: Active region, Up: Customization Options
4.22 Option for diff buffer looks
=================================
Brief: Set the overall style of diffs.
Symbol: modus-themes-diffs (choice type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. desaturated
3. bg-only
The default (nil) uses fairly intense color combinations for diffs,
by applying prominently colored backgrounds, with appropriately tinted
foregrounds.
Option desaturated follows the same principles as with the default
(nil), though it tones down all relevant colors.
Option bg-only applies a background but does not override the
texts foreground. This makes it suitable for a non-nil value passed to
diff-font-lock-syntax (note: Magit does not support syntax
highlighting in diffs—last checked on 2021-12-02).
When the user option modus-themes-deuteranopia is non-nil, all
diffs will use a red/blue color-coding system instead of the standard
red/green. Other stylistic changes are made in the interest of
optimizing for such a use-case.
*note Option for red-green color deficiency or deuteranopia:
Deuteranopia style.
In versions before 2.0.0 there was an option for foreground-only
diffs. This is no longer supported at the theme level because there are
cases where the perceived contrast and overall contextuality were not
good enough although the applied colors were technically above the 7:1
contrast threshold.
*note Diffs with only the foreground::.
*note Ediff without diff color-coding::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Org mode blocks, Next: Org agenda, Prev: Diffs, Up: Customization Options
4.23 Option for org-mode block styles
=====================================
Brief: Set the overall style of Org code blocks, quotes, and the like.
Symbol: modus-themes-org-blocks (choice type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. gray-background (value grayscale exists for backward
compatibility)
3. tinted-background (value rainbow exists for backward
compatibility)
Nil (the default) means that the block has no background of its own:
it uses the one that applies to the rest of the buffer. In this case,
the delimiter lines have a gray color for their text, making them look
exactly like all other Org properties.
Option gray-background applies a subtle gray background to the
blocks contents. It also affects the begin and end lines of the block
as they get another shade of gray as their background, which
differentiates them from the contents of the block. All background
colors extend to the edge of the window, giving the area a rectangular,
“blocky” presentation.
Option tinted-background uses a slightly colored background for the
contents of the block. The exact color will depend on the programming
language and is controlled by the variable org-src-block-faces (refer
to the themes source code for the current association list). For this
to take effect, the Org buffer needs to be restarted with
org-mode-restart. In this scenario, it may be better to inhibit the
extension of the delimiter lines background to the edge of the window
because Org does not provide a mechanism to update their colors
depending on the contents of the block. Disable the extension of such
backgrounds by setting org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line to nil.
Code blocks use their major modes colors only when the variable
org-src-fontify-natively is non-nil. While quote/verse blocks require
setting org-fontify-quote-and-verse-blocks to a non-nil value.
*note Update Org block delimiter fontification::.
Older versions of the themes provided options grayscale (or
greyscale) and rainbow. Those will continue to work as they are
aliases for gray-background and tinted-background, respectively.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Org agenda, Next: Heading styles, Prev: Org mode blocks, Up: Customization Options
4.24 Option for Org agenda constructs
=====================================
Brief: Control the style of the Org agenda. Multiple parameters are
available, each with its own options.
Symbol: modus-themes-org-agenda (alist type, multiple styles)
This is an alist that accepts a (key . value) combination. Some
values are specified as a list. Here is a sample, followed by a
description of all possible combinations:
(setq modus-themes-org-agenda
'((header-block . (variable-pitch 1.5))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic bold-today 1.2))
(event . (accented italic varied))
(scheduled . uniform)
(habit . traffic-light)))
A header-block key applies to elements that concern the headings
which demarcate blocks in the structure of the agenda. By default (a
nil value) those are rendered in a bold typographic weight, plus a
height that is slightly taller than the default font size. Acceptable
values come in the form of a list that can include either or both of
those properties:
variable-pitch to use a proportionately spaced typeface;
• A number as a floating point (e.g. 1.5) to set the height of the
text to that many times the default font height. A float of 1.0 or
the symbol no-scale have the same effect of making the font the
same height as the rest of the buffer. When neither a number nor
no-scale are present, the default is a small increase in height
(a value of 1.15).
Instead of a floating point, an acceptable value can be in the form
of a cons cell like (height . FLOAT) or (height FLOAT), where
FLOAT is the given number.
• The symbol of a weight attribute adjusts the font of the heading
accordingly, such as light, semibold, etc. Valid symbols are
defined in the variable modus-themes-weights. The absence of a
weight means that bold will be used by virtue of inheriting the
bold face.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.
In case both a number and no-scale are in the list, the latter
takes precedence. If two numbers are specified, the first one is
applied.
Example usage:
(header-block . nil)
(header-block . (1.5))
(header-block . (no-scale))
(header-block . (variable-pitch 1.5))
(header-block . (variable-pitch 1.5 semibold))
A header-date key covers date headings. Dates use only a
foreground color by default (a nil value), with weekdays and weekends
having a slight difference in hueness. The current date has an added
gray background. This key accepts a list of values that can include any
of the following properties:
grayscale to make weekdays use the main foreground color and
weekends a more subtle gray;
workaholic to make weekdays and weekends look the same in terms
of color;
bold-today to apply a bold typographic weight to the current
date;
bold-all to render all date headings in a bold weight;
underline-today applies an underline to the current date while
removing the background it has by default;
• A number as a floating point (e.g. 1.2) to set the height of the
text to that many times the default font height. The default is
the same as the base font height (the equivalent of 1.0). Instead
of a floating point, an acceptable value can be in the form of a
cons cell like (height . FLOAT) or (height FLOAT), where FLOAT
is the given number.
For example:
(header-date . nil)
(header-date . (workaholic))
(header-date . (grayscale bold-all))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic bold-today))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic bold-today scale-heading))
An event key covers (i) headings with a plain time stamp that are
shown on the agenda, also known as events, (ii) entries imported from
the diary, and (iii) other items that derive from a symbolic expression
or sexp (phases of the moon, holidays, etc.). By default all those look
the same and have a subtle foreground color (the default is a nil value
or an empty list). This key accepts a list of properties. Those are:
accented applies an accent value to the events foreground,
replacing the original gray. It makes all entries stand out more.
italic adds a slant to the fonts forms (italic or oblique forms,
depending on the typeface).
varied differentiates between events with a plain time stamp and
entries that are generated from either the diary or a symbolic
expression. It generally puts more emphasis on events. When
varied is combined with accented, it makes only events use an
accent color, while diary/sexp entries retain their original subtle
foreground. When varied is used in tandem with italic, it
applies a slant only to diary and sexp entries, not events. And
when varied is the sole property passed to the event key, it
has the same meaning as the list (italic varied). The combination
of varied, accented, italic covers all of the aforementioned
cases.
For example:
(event . nil)
(event . (italic))
(event . (accented italic))
(event . (accented italic varied))
A scheduled key applies to tasks with a scheduled date. By default
(a nil value), those use varying shades of yellow to denote (i) a past
or current date and (ii) a future date. Valid values are symbols:
• nil (default);
uniform to make all scheduled dates the same color;
rainbow to use contrasting colors for past, present, future
scheduled dates.
For example:
(scheduled . nil)
(scheduled . uniform)
(scheduled . rainbow)
A habit key applies to the org-habit graph. All possible value
are passed as a symbol. Those are:
• The default (nil) is meant to conform with the original aesthetic
of org-habit. It employs all four color codes that correspond to
the org-habit states—clear, ready, alert, and overdue—while
distinguishing between their present and future variants. This
results in a total of eight colors in use: red, yellow, green,
blue, in tinted and shaded versions. They cover the full set of
information provided by the org-habit consistency graph.
simplified is like the default except that it removes the
dichotomy between current and future variants by applying uniform
color-coded values. It applies a total of four colors: red,
yellow, green, blue. They produce a simplified consistency graph
that is more legible (or less busy) than the default. The intent
is to shift focus towards the distinction between the four states
of a habit task, rather than each states present/future outlook.
traffic-light further reduces the available colors to red,
yellow, and green. As in simplified, present and future variants
appear uniformly, but differently from it, the clear state is
rendered in a green hue, instead of the original blue. This is
meant to capture the use-case where a habit task being too early is
less important than it being too late. The difference between
ready and clear states is attenuated by painting both of them using
shades of green. This option thus highlights the alert and overdue
states.
• When modus-themes-deuteranopia is non-nil the exact style of the
habit graph adapts to the needs of users with red-green color
deficiency by substituting every instance of green with blue or
cyan (depending on the specifics).
*note Option for red-green color deficiency or deuteranopia:
Deuteranopia style.
For example:
(habit . nil)
(habit . simplified)
(habit . traffic-light)
Putting it all together, the alist can look like this:
'((header-block . (1.5 variable-pitch))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic bold-today))
(event . (accented varied))
(scheduled . uniform)
(habit . traffic-light))
;; Or else:
(setq modus-themes-org-agenda
'((header-block . (1.5 variable-pitch))
(header-date . (grayscale workaholic bold-today))
(event . (accented varied))
(scheduled . uniform)
(habit . traffic-light)))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Heading styles, Next: UI typeface, Prev: Org agenda, Up: Customization Options
4.25 Option for the headings overall style
===========================================
Brief: Control the style of headings. This can be particularised for
each level of heading (e.g. Org has eight levels).
Symbol: modus-themes-headings (alist type, multiple properties)
This is an alist that accepts a (key . list-of-values) combination.
The key is either a number, representing the headings level or t,
which pertains to the fallback style. The list of values covers symbols
that refer to properties, as described below. Here is a sample,
followed by a presentation of all available properties:
(setq modus-themes-headings
'((1 . (background overline variable-pitch 1.5))
(2 . (overline rainbow 1.3))
(3 . (overline 1.1))
(t . (monochrome))))
Properties:
rainbow
overline
background
monochrome
• A font weight, which must be supported by the underlying typeface:
thin
ultralight
extralight
light
semilight
regular
medium
semibold
bold
heavy
extrabold
ultrabold
no-bold (deprecated alias of a regular weight)
• A floating point as a height multiple of the default or a cons cell
in the form of (height . FLOAT).
By default (a nil value for this variable), all headings have a
bold typographic weight and use a desaturated text color.
A rainbow property makes the text color more saturated.
An overline property draws a line above the area of the heading.
A background property adds a subtle tinted color to the background
of the heading.
A monochrome property makes the heading the same as the base color,
which is that of the default faces foreground. When background is
also set, monochrome changes its color to gray. If both monochrome
and rainbow are set, the former takes precedence.
A variable-pitch property changes the font family of the heading to
that of the variable-pitch face (normally a proportionately spaced
typeface).
The symbol of a weight attribute adjusts the font of the heading
accordingly, such as light, semibold, etc. Valid symbols are
defined in the variable modus-themes-weights. The absence of a weight
means that bold will be used by virtue of inheriting the bold face.
For backward compatibility, the no-bold value is accepted, though
users are encouraged to specify a regular weight instead.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.
A number, expressed as a floating point (e.g. 1.5), adjusts the
height of the heading to that many times the base font size. The
default height is the same as 1.0, though it need not be explicitly
stated. Instead of a floating point, an acceptable value can be in the
form of a cons cell like (height . FLOAT) or (height FLOAT), where
FLOAT is the given number.
Combinations of any of those properties are expressed as a list, like
in these examples:
(semibold)
(rainbow background)
(overline monochrome semibold 1.3)
(overline monochrome semibold (height 1.3)) ; same as above
(overline monochrome semibold (height . 1.3)) ; same as above
The order in which the properties are set is not significant.
In user configuration files the form may look like this:
(setq modus-themes-headings
'((1 . (background overline rainbow 1.5))
(2 . (background overline 1.3))
(t . (overline semibold))))
When defining the styles per heading level, it is possible to pass a
non-nil value (t) instead of a list of properties. This will retain
the original aesthetic for that level. For example:
(setq modus-themes-headings
'((1 . t) ; keep the default style
(2 . (background overline))
(t . (rainbow)))) ; style for all other headings
(setq modus-themes-headings
'((1 . (background overline))
(2 . (rainbow semibold))
(t . t))) ; default style for all other levels
For Org users, the extent of the heading depends on the variable
org-fontify-whole-heading-line. This affects the overline and
background properties. Depending on the version of Org, there may be
others, such as org-fontify-done-headline.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: UI typeface, Prev: Heading styles, Up: Customization Options
4.26 Option for variable-pitch font in UI elements
==================================================
Brief: Toggle the use of proportionately spaced (variable-pitch) fonts
in the User Interface.
Symbol: modus-themes-variable-pitch-ui (boolean type)
Possible values:
1. nil (default)
2. t
This option concerns User Interface elements that are under the
direct control of Emacs. In particular: the mode line, header line, tab
bar, and tab line.
The default is to use the same font as the rest of Emacs, which
usually is a monospaced family.
With a non-nil value (t) apply a proportionately spaced typeface.
This is done by assigning the variable-pitch face to the relevant
items.
*note Font configurations for Org and others::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Advanced customization, Next: Face coverage, Prev: Customization Options, Up: Top
5 Advanced customization
************************
Unlike the predefined customization options which follow a clear pattern
of allowing the user to quickly specify their preference, the themes
also provide a more flexible, albeit difficult, mechanism to control
things with precision (*note Customization Options::).
This section is of interest only to users who are prepared to
maintain their own local tweaks and who are willing to deal with any
possible incompatibilities between versioned releases of the themes. As
such, they are labelled as “do-it-yourself” or “DIY”.
* Menu:
* More accurate colors in terminal emulators::
* Range of color with terminal emulators::
* Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::
* Per-theme customization settings::
* Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette::
* Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::
* Remap face with local value::
* Cycle through arbitrary colors::
* Override colors::
* Override color saturation::
* Override colors through blending::
* Font configurations for Org and others::
* Configure bold and italic faces::
* Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces::
* Custom Org emphasis faces::
* Update Org block delimiter fontification::
* Measure color contrast::
* Load theme depending on time of day::
* Backdrop for pdf-tools::
* Decrease mode line height::
* Toggle themes without reloading them::
* A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading::
* Diffs with only the foreground::
* Ediff without diff color-coding::
* Near-monochrome syntax highlighting::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: More accurate colors in terminal emulators, Next: Range of color with terminal emulators, Up: Advanced customization
5.1 More accurate colors in terminal emulators
==============================================
[ This is based on partial information. Please help verify and/or
expand these findings. ]
The graphical version of Emacs can reproduce color values accurately.
Whereas things get more tricky when Emacs is used in a terminal
emulator, because the terminals own capabilities determine the number
of colors that may be displayed: the Modus themes dont look as good in
that case.
There is, however, a way to instruct supported terminal emulators to
use more accurate colors. In a shell prompt type toe -a | grep direct
to get a list of relevant terminfo entries. There should be items such
as xterm-direct, alacritty-direct, kitty-direct. Once you find
the one that corresponds to your terminal, call Emacs with an
environment variable like TERM=xterm-direct. Example that can be
adapted to shell aliases:
TERM=xterm-direct emacsclient -nw
Another example that can be bound to a key:
TERM=xterm-direct uxterm -e emacsclient -nw

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Range of color with terminal emulators, Next: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette, Prev: More accurate colors in terminal emulators, Up: Advanced customization
5.2 Range of color with terminal emulators
==========================================
[ This is based on partial information. Please help verify and/or
expand these findings. ]
When Emacs runs in a non-windowed session its color reproduction
capacity is framed or determined by the underlying terminal emulator
(*note More accurate colors in terminal emulators::). Emacs cannot
produce a color that lies outside the range of what the terminals color
palette renders possible.
This is immediately noticeable when the terminals first 16 codes do
not include a pure black value for the termcol0 entry and a pure white
for termcol15. Emacs cannot set the correct background (white for
modus-operandi; black for modus-vivendi) or foreground (inverse of
the background). It thus falls back to the closest approximation, which
seldom is appropriate for the purposes of the Modus themes.
In such a case, the user is expected to update their terminals color
palette such as by adapting these resources:
! Theme: modus-operandi
! Description: XTerm port of modus-operandi (Modus themes for GNU Emacs)
! Author: Protesilaos Stavrou, <https://protesilaos.com>
xterm*background: #ffffff
xterm*foreground: #000000
xterm*color0: #000000
xterm*color1: #a60000
xterm*color2: #005e00
xterm*color3: #813e00
xterm*color4: #0031a9
xterm*color5: #721045
xterm*color6: #00538b
xterm*color7: #bfbfbf
xterm*color8: #595959
xterm*color9: #972500
xterm*color10: #315b00
xterm*color11: #70480f
xterm*color12: #2544bb
xterm*color13: #5317ac
xterm*color14: #005a5f
xterm*color15: #ffffff
! Theme: modus-vivendi
! Description: XTerm port of modus-vivendi (Modus themes for GNU Emacs)
! Author: Protesilaos Stavrou, <https://protesilaos.com>
xterm*background: #000000
xterm*foreground: #ffffff
xterm*color0: #000000
xterm*color1: #ff8059
xterm*color2: #44bc44
xterm*color3: #d0bc00
xterm*color4: #2fafff
xterm*color5: #feacd0
xterm*color6: #00d3d0
xterm*color7: #bfbfbf
xterm*color8: #595959
xterm*color9: #ef8b50
xterm*color10: #70b900
xterm*color11: #c0c530
xterm*color12: #79a8ff
xterm*color13: #b6a0ff
xterm*color14: #6ae4b9
xterm*color15: #ffffff

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette, Next: Per-theme customization settings, Prev: Range of color with terminal emulators, Up: Advanced customization
5.3 Visualize the active Modus themes palette
==============================================
The command modus-themes-list-colors prompts for a choice between
modus-operandi and modus-vivendi to produce a help buffer that shows
a preview of each variable in the given themes color palette. The
command modus-themes-list-colors-current skips the prompt, using the
current Modus theme.
Each row shows a foreground and background coloration using the
underlying value it references. For example a line with #a60000 (a
shade of red) will show red text followed by a stripe with that same
color as a backdrop.
The name of the buffer describes the given Modus theme. It is thus
called *modus-operandi-list-colors* or *modus-vivendi-list-colors*.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Per-theme customization settings, Next: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette, Prev: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette, Up: Advanced customization
5.4 Per-theme customization settings
====================================
If you prefer to maintain different customization options between the
two themes, it is best you write your own functions that first set those
options and then load the relevant theme. The following code does
exactly that by simply differentiating the two themes on the choice of
bold constructs in code syntax (enabled for one, disabled for the
other).
(defun my-demo-modus-operandi ()
(interactive)
(setq modus-themes-bold-constructs t) ; ENABLE bold
(modus-themes-load-operandi))
(defun my-demo-modus-vivendi ()
(interactive)
(setq modus-themes-bold-constructs nil) ; DISABLE bold
(modus-themes-load-vivendi))
(defun my-demo-modus-themes-toggle ()
(if (eq (car custom-enabled-themes) 'modus-operandi)
(my-demo-modus-vivendi)
(my-demo-modus-operandi)))
Then assign my-demo-modus-themes-toggle to a key instead of the
equivalent the themes provide.
For a more elaborate design, it is better to inspect the source code
of modus-themes-toggle and relevant functions.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette, Next: Face specs at scale using the themes' palette, Prev: Per-theme customization settings, Up: Advanced customization
5.5 Case-by-case face specs using the themes palette
=====================================================
This section is about tweaking individual faces. If you plan to do
things at scale, consult the next section: *note Set multiple faces:
Face specs at scale using the themes' palette.
We already covered in previous sections how to toggle between the
themes and how to configure options prior to loading. We also explained
that some of the functions made available to users will fire up a hook
that can be used to pass tweaks in the post-theme-load phase.
Now assume you wish to change a single face, say, the cursor. And
you would like to get the standard “blue” color value of the active
Modus theme, whether it is Modus Operandi or Modus Vivendi. To do that,
you can use the modus-themes-color function. It accepts a symbol that
is associated with a color in modus-themes-operandi-colors and
modus-themes-vivendi-colors. Like this:
(modus-themes-color 'blue)
The function always extracts the color value of the active Modus
theme.
(progn
(load-theme 'modus-operandi t)
(modus-themes-color 'blue)) ; "#0031a9" for `modus-operandi'
(progn
(load-theme 'modus-vivendi t)
(modus-themes-color 'blue)) ; "#2fafff" for `modus-vivendi'
Do C-h v on the aforementioned variables to check all the available
symbols that can be passed to this function. Or simply invoke the
command modus-themes-list-colors to produce a buffer with a preview of
each entry in the palette.
*note Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::.
With that granted, let us expand the example to actually change the
cursor faces background property. We employ the built-in function of
set-face-attribute:
(set-face-attribute 'cursor nil :background (modus-themes-color 'blue))
If you evaluate this form, your cursor will become blue. But if you
change themes, such as with modus-themes-toggle, your edits will be
lost, because the newly loaded theme will override the :background
attribute you had assigned to that face.
For such changes to persist, we need to make them after loading the
theme. So we rely on modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook, which gets
called from modus-themes-load-operandi, modus-themes-load-vivendi,
as well as the command modus-themes-toggle. Here is a sample function
that tweaks two faces and then gets added to the hook:
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(set-face-attribute 'cursor nil :background (modus-themes-color 'blue))
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-type-face nil :foreground (modus-themes-color 'magenta-alt)))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
*note A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading::.
Using this principle, it is possible to override the styles of faces
without having to find color values for each case.
Another application is to control the precise weight for bold
constructs. This is particularly useful if your typeface has several
variants such as “heavy”, “extrabold”, “semibold”. All you have to do
is edit the bold face. For example:
(set-face-attribute 'bold nil :weight 'semibold)
Remember to use the custom function and hook combo we demonstrated
above. Because the themes do not hard-wire a specific weight, this
simple form is enough to change the weight of all bold constructs
throughout the interface.
Finally, there are cases where you want to tweak colors though wish
to apply different ones to each theme, say, a blue hue for Modus
Operandi and a shade of red for Modus Vivendi. To this end, we provide
modus-themes-color-alts as a convenience function to save you from the
trouble of writing separate wrappers for each theme. It still returns a
single value by querying either of modus-themes-operandi-colors and
modus-themes-vivendi-colors, only here you pass the two keys you want,
first for modus-operandi then modus-vivendi.
Take the previous example with the cursor face:
;; Blue for `modus-operandi' and red for `modus-vivendi'
(set-face-attribute 'cursor nil :background (modus-themes-color-alts 'blue 'red))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Face specs at scale using the themes' palette, Next: Remap face with local value, Prev: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette, Up: Advanced customization
5.6 Face specs at scale using the themes palette
=================================================
The examples here are for large scale operations. For simple, one-off
tweaks, you may prefer the approach documented in the previous section
(*note Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette::).
The modus-themes-with-colors macro lets you retrieve multiple color
values by employing the backquote/backtick and comma notation. The
values are stored in the alists modus-themes-operandi-colors and
modus-themes-vivendi-colors, while the macro always queries that of
the active Modus theme (preview the current palette with the command
modus-themes-list-colors).
*note Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::.
Here is an abstract example that just returns a list of color values
while modus-operandi is enabled:
(modus-themes-with-colors
(list fg-main
blue-faint
magenta
magenta-alt-other
cyan-alt-other
fg-special-cold
blue-alt
magenta-faint
cyan
fg-main
green-faint
red-alt-faint
blue-alt-faint
fg-special-warm
cyan-alt
blue))
;; =>
;; ("#000000" "#002f88" "#721045" "#5317ac"
;; "#005a5f" "#093060" "#2544bb" "#752f50"
;; "#00538b" "#000000" "#104410" "#702f00"
;; "#003f78" "#5d3026" "#30517f" "#0031a9")
Getting a list of colors may have its applications, though what you
are most likely interested in is how to use those variables to configure
several faces at once. To do so we can rely on the built-in
custom-set-faces function, which sets face specifications for the
special user theme. That “theme” gets applied on top of regular
themes like modus-operandi and modus-vivendi.
This is how it works:
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(cursor ((,class :background ,blue)))
`(mode-line ((,class :background ,yellow-nuanced-bg
:foreground ,yellow-nuanced-fg)))
`(mode-line-inactive ((,class :background ,blue-nuanced-bg
:foreground ,blue-nuanced-fg)))))
The above snippet will immediately refashion the faces it names once
it is evaluated. However, if you switch between the Modus themes, say,
from modus-operandi to modus-vivendi, the colors will not get
updated to match those of the new theme. To make things work across the
themes, we need to employ the same technique we discussed in the
previous section, namely, to pass our changes at the post-theme-load
phase via a hook.
The themes provide the modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook, which
gets called from modus-themes-load-operandi,
modus-themes-load-vivendi, as well as the command
modus-themes-toggle. With this knowledge, you can wrap the macro in a
function and then assign that function to the hook. Thus:
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(cursor ((,class :background ,blue)))
`(mode-line ((,class :background ,yellow-nuanced-bg
:foreground ,yellow-nuanced-fg)))
`(mode-line-inactive ((,class :background ,blue-nuanced-bg
:foreground ,blue-nuanced-fg))))))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
*note A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading::.
To discover the faces defined by all loaded libraries, you may do
M-x list-faces-display. Be warned that when you :inherit a face you
are introducing an implicit dependency, so try to avoid doing so for
libraries other than the built-in faces.el (or at least understand
that things may break if you inherit from a yet-to-be-loaded face).
Also bear in mind that these examples are meant to work with the
Modus themes. If you are cycling between multiple themes you may
encounter unforeseen issues, such as the colors of the Modus themes
being applied to a non-Modus item.
Finally, note that you can still use other functions where those make
sense. For example, the modus-themes-color-alts that was discussed in
the previous section. Adapt the above example like this:
...
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(cursor ((,class :background ,(modus-themes-color-alts 'blue 'green))))
...))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Remap face with local value, Next: Cycle through arbitrary colors, Prev: Face specs at scale using the themes' palette, Up: Advanced customization
5.7 Remap face with local value
===============================
There are cases where we need to change the buffer-local attributes of a
face. This might be because we have our own minor mode that re-uses a
face for a particular purpose, such as a line selection tool that
activates hl-line-mode, but we wish to keep it distinct from other
buffers. This is where face-remap-add-relative can be applied and may
be combined with modus-themes-with-colors to deliver consistent
results.
*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::.
In this example we will write a simple interactive function that
adjusts the background color of the region face. This is the sample
code:
(defvar my-rainbow-region-colors
(modus-themes-with-colors
`((red . ,red-subtle-bg)
(green . ,green-subtle-bg)
(yellow . ,yellow-subtle-bg)
(blue . ,blue-subtle-bg)
(magenta . ,magenta-subtle-bg)
(cyan . ,cyan-subtle-bg)))
"Sample list of color values for `my-rainbow-region'.")
(defun my-rainbow-region (color)
"Remap buffer-local attribute of `region' using COLOR."
(interactive
(list
(completing-read "Pick a color: " my-rainbow-region-colors)))
(face-remap-add-relative
'region
`( :background ,(alist-get (intern color) my-rainbow-region-colors)
:foreground ,(face-attribute 'default :foreground))))
When my-rainbow-region is called interactively, it prompts for a
color to use. The list of candidates is drawn from the car of each
association in my-rainbow-region-colors (so “red”, “green”, etc.).
To extend this principle, we may write wrapper functions that pass a
color directly. Those can be useful in tandem with hooks. Consider
this example:
(defun my-rainbow-region-magenta ()
(my-rainbow-region 'magenta))
(add-hook 'diff-mode-hook #'my-rainbow-region-magenta)
Whenever we enter a diff-mode buffer, we now get a magenta-colored
region.
Perhaps you may wish to generalise those findings in to a set of
functions that also accept an arbitrary face. We shall leave the
experimentation up to you.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Cycle through arbitrary colors, Next: Override colors, Prev: Remap face with local value, Up: Advanced customization
5.8 Cycle through arbitrary colors
==================================
Users may opt to customize individual faces of the themes to accommodate
their particular needs. One such case is with the color intensity of
comments, specifically the foreground of font-lock-comment-face. The
Modus themes set that to a readable value, in accordance with their
accessibility objective, though users may prefer to lower the overall
contrast on an on-demand basis.
One way to achieve this is to design a command that cycles through
three distinct levels of intensity, though the following can be adapted
to any kind of cyclic behaviour, such as to switch between red, green,
and blue.
In the following example, we employ the modus-themes-color function
which reads a symbol that represents an entry in the active themes
color palette (*note Case-by-case face specs using the themes'
palette::). Those are stored in my-modus-themes-comment-colors.
(defvar my-modus-themes-comment-colors
;; We are abusing the palette here, as those colors have their own
;; purpose in the palette, so please ignore the semantics of their
;; names.
'((low . bg-region)
(medium . bg-tab-inactive-alt)
(high . fg-alt))
"Alist of levels of intensity mapped to color palette entries.
The entries are found in `modus-themes-operandi-colors' or
`modus-themes-vivendi-colors'.")
(defvar my-modus-themes--adjust-comment-color-state nil
"The cyclic state of `my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color'.
For internal use.")
(defun my-modus-themes--comment-foreground (degree state)
"Set `font-lock-comment-face' foreground.
Use `my-modus-themes-comment-colors' to extract the color value
for each level of intensity.
This is complementary to `my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color'."
(let ((palette-colors my-modus-themes-comment-colors))
(set-face-foreground
'font-lock-comment-face
(modus-themes-color (alist-get degree palette-colors)))
(setq my-modus-themes--adjust-comment-color-state state)
(message "Comments are set to %s contrast" degree)))
(defun my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color ()
"Cycle through levels of intensity for comments.
The levels are determined by `my-modus-themes-comment-colors'."
(interactive)
(pcase my-modus-themes--adjust-comment-color-state
('nil
(my-modus-themes--comment-foreground 'low 1))
(1
(my-modus-themes--comment-foreground 'medium 2))
(_
(my-modus-themes--comment-foreground 'high nil))))
With the above, M-x my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color will cycle
through the three levels of intensity that have been specified.
Another approach is to not read from the active themes color palette
and instead provide explicit color values, either in hexadecimal RGB
notation (like #123456) or as the names that are displayed in the
output of M-x list-colors-display. In this case, the alist with the
colors will have to account for the active theme, so as to set the
appropriate colors. While this introduces a bit more complexity, it
ultimately offers greater flexibility on the choice of colors for such a
niche functionality (so there is no need to abuse the palette of the
active Modus theme):
(defvar my-modus-themes-comment-colors
'((light . ((low . "gray75")
(medium . "gray50")
(high . "#505050"))) ; the default for `modus-operandi'
(dark . ((low . "gray25")
(medium . "gray50")
(high . "#a8a8a8")))) ; the default for `modus-vivendi'
"Alist of levels of intensity mapped to color values.
For such colors, consult the command `list-colors-display'. Pass
the name of a color or its hex value.")
(defvar my-modus-themes--adjust-comment-color-state nil
"The cyclic state of `my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color'.
For internal use.")
(defun my-modus-themes--comment-foreground (degree state)
"Set `font-lock-comment-face' foreground.
Use `my-modus-themes-comment-colors' to extract the color value
for each level of intensity.
This is complementary to `my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color'."
(let* ((colors my-modus-themes-comment-colors)
(levels (pcase (car custom-enabled-themes)
('modus-operandi (alist-get 'light colors))
('modus-vivendi (alist-get 'dark colors)))))
(set-face-foreground
'font-lock-comment-face
(alist-get degree levels))
(setq my-modus-themes--adjust-comment-color-state state)
(message "Comments are set to %s contrast" degree)))
(defun my-modus-themes-adjust-comment-color ()
"Cycle through levels of intensity for comments.
The levels are determined by `my-modus-themes-comment-colors'."
(interactive)
(pcase my-modus-themes--adjust-comment-color-state
('nil
(my-modus-themes--comment-foreground 'low 1))
(1
(my-modus-themes--comment-foreground 'medium 2))
(_
(my-modus-themes--comment-foreground 'high nil))))
The effect of the above configurations on font-lock-comment-face is
global. To make it buffer-local, one must tweak the code to employ the
function face-remap-add-relative (*note Remap face with local
value::).
So this form in my-modus-themes--comment-foreground:
;; example 1
(...
(set-face-foreground
'font-lock-comment-face
(modus-themes-color (alist-get degree palette-colors)))
...)
;; example 2
(...
(set-face-foreground
'font-lock-comment-face
(alist-get degree levels))
...)
Must become this:
;; example 1
(...
(face-remap-add-relative
'font-lock-comment-face
`(:foreground ,(modus-themes-color (alist-get degree palette-colors))))
...)
;; example 2
(...
(face-remap-add-relative
'font-lock-comment-face
`(:foreground ,(alist-get degree levels)))
...)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Override colors, Next: Override color saturation, Prev: Cycle through arbitrary colors, Up: Advanced customization
5.9 Override colors
===================
The themes provide a mechanism for overriding their color values. This
is controlled by the variables modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides
and modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides, which are alists that should
mirror a subset of the associations in modus-themes-operandi-colors
and modus-themes-vivendi-colors respectively. As with all
customizations, overriding must be done before loading the affected
theme.
*note Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::.
Let us approach the present topic one step at a time. Here is a
simplified excerpt of the default palette for Modus Operandi with some
basic background values that apply to buffers and the mode line
(remember to inspect the actual value to find out all the associations
that can be overridden):
(defconst modus-themes-operandi-colors
'((bg-main . "#ffffff")
(bg-dim . "#f8f8f8")
(bg-alt . "#f0f0f0")
(bg-active . "#d7d7d7")
(bg-inactive . "#efefef")))
As one can tell, we bind a key to a hexadecimal RGB color value. Now
say we wish to override those specific values and have our changes
propagate to all faces that use those keys. We could write something
like this, which adds a subtle ochre tint:
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides
'((bg-main . "#fefcf4")
(bg-dim . "#faf6ef")
(bg-alt . "#f7efe5")
(bg-active . "#e8dfd1")
(bg-inactive . "#f6ece5")))
Once this is evaluated, any subsequent loading of modus-operandi
will use those values instead of the defaults. No further intervention
is required.
To reset the changes, we apply this and reload the theme:
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides nil)
Users who wish to leverage such a mechanism can opt to implement it
on-demand by means of a global minor mode. The following snippet covers
both themes and expands to some more assosiations in the palette:
(define-minor-mode my-modus-themes-tinted
"Tweak some Modus themes colors."
:init-value nil
:global t
(if my-modus-themes-tinted
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides
'((bg-main . "#fefcf4")
(bg-dim . "#faf6ef")
(bg-alt . "#f7efe5")
(bg-hl-line . "#f4f0e3")
(bg-active . "#e8dfd1")
(bg-inactive . "#f6ece5")
(bg-region . "#c6bab1")
(bg-header . "#ede3e0")
(bg-tab-bar . "#dcd3d3")
(bg-tab-active . "#fdf6eb")
(bg-tab-inactive . "#c8bab8"))
modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides
'((bg-main . "#100b17")
(bg-dim . "#161129")
(bg-alt . "#181732")
(bg-hl-line . "#191628")
(bg-active . "#282e46")
(bg-inactive . "#1a1e39")
(bg-region . "#393a53")
(bg-header . "#202037")
(bg-tab-bar . "#262b41")
(bg-tab-active . "#120f18")
(bg-tab-inactive . "#3a3a5a")))
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides nil
modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides nil)))
A more neutral style for modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides can
look like this:
'((bg-main . "#f7f7f7")
(bg-dim . "#f2f2f2")
(bg-alt . "#e8e8e8")
(bg-hl-line . "#eaeaef")
(bg-active . "#e0e0e0")
(bg-inactive . "#e6e6e6")
(bg-region . "#b5b5b5")
(bg-header . "#e4e4e4")
(bg-tab-bar . "#d1d1d4")
(bg-tab-active . "#f5f5f5")
(bg-tab-inactive . "#c0c0c0"))
With those in place, one can use M-x my-modus-themes-tinted and
then load the Modus theme of their choice. The new palette subset will
come into effect: subtle ochre tints (or shades of gray) for Modus
Operandi and night sky blue shades for Modus Vivendi. Switching between
the two themes, such as with M-x modus-themes-toggle will also use the
overrides.
Given that this is a user-level customization, one is free to
implement whatever color values they desire, even if the possible
combinations fall below the minimum 7:1 contrast ratio that governs the
design of the themes (the WCAG AAA legibility standard). Alternatively,
this can also be done programmatically (*note Override color
saturation::).
For manual interventions it is advised to inspect the source code of
modus-themes-operandi-colors and modus-themes-vivendi-colors for the
inline commentary: it explains what the intended use of each palette
subset is.
Furthermore, users may benefit from the modus-themes-contrast
function that we provide: *note test color combinations: Measure color
contrast. It measures the contrast ratio between two color values, so
it can help in overriding the palette (or a subset thereof) without
making the end result inaccessible.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Override color saturation, Next: Override colors through blending, Prev: Override colors, Up: Advanced customization
5.10 Override color saturation
==============================
In the previous section we documented how one can override color values
manually (*note Override colors::). Here we use a programmatic approach
which leverages the built-in color-saturate-name function to adjust
the saturation of all color values used by the active Modus theme. Our
goal is to prepare a counterpart of the active themes palette that
holds modified color values, adjusted for a percent change in
saturation. A positive number amplifies the effect, while a negative
one will move towards a grayscale spectrum.
We start with a function that can be either called from Lisp or
invoked interactively. In the former scenario, we pass to it the rate
of change we want. While in the latter, a minibuffer prompt asks for a
number to apply the desired effect. In either case, we intend to assign
anew the value of modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides (light theme)
and the same for modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides (dark theme).
(defun my-modus-themes-saturate (percent)
"Saturate current Modus theme palette overrides by PERCENT."
(interactive
(list (read-number "Saturation by percent: ")))
(let* ((theme (modus-themes--current-theme))
(palette (pcase theme
('modus-operandi modus-themes-operandi-colors)
('modus-vivendi modus-themes-vivendi-colors)
(_ (error "No Modus theme is active"))))
(overrides (pcase theme
('modus-operandi 'modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides)
('modus-vivendi 'modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides)
(_ (error "No Modus theme is active")))))
(let (name cons colors)
(dolist (cons palette)
(setq name (color-saturate-name (cdr cons) percent))
(setq name (format "%s" name))
(setq cons `(,(car cons) . ,name))
(push cons colors))
(set overrides colors))
(pcase theme
('modus-operandi (modus-themes-load-operandi))
('modus-vivendi (modus-themes-load-vivendi)))))
;; sample Elisp calls (or call `my-modus-themes-saturate' interactively)
(my-modus-themes-saturate 50)
(my-modus-themes-saturate -75)
Using the above has an immediate effect, as it reloads the active
Modus theme.
The my-modus-themes-saturate function stores new color values in
the variables modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides and
modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides, meaning that it undoes changes
implemented by the user on individual colors. To have both automatic
saturation adjustment across the board and retain per-case edits to the
palette, some tweaks to the above function are required. For example:
(defvar my-modus-themes-vivendi-extra-color-overrides
'((fg-main . "#ead0c0")
(bg-main . "#050515"))
"My bespoke colors for `modus-vivendi'.")
(defvar my-modus-themes-operandi-extra-color-overrides
'((fg-main . "#1a1a1a")
(bg-main . "#fefcf4"))
"My bespoke colors for `modus-operandi'.")
(defun my-modus-themes-saturate (percent)
"Saturate current Modus theme palette overrides by PERCENT.
Preserve the color values stored in
`my-modus-themes-operandi-extra-color-overrides',
`my-modus-themes-vivendi-extra-color-overrides'."
(interactive
(list (read-number "Saturation by percent: ")))
(let* ((theme (modus-themes--current-theme))
(palette (pcase theme
('modus-operandi modus-themes-operandi-colors)
('modus-vivendi modus-themes-vivendi-colors)
(_ (error "No Modus theme is active"))))
(overrides (pcase theme
('modus-operandi 'modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides)
('modus-vivendi 'modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides)
(_ (error "No Modus theme is active"))))
(extra-overrides (pcase theme
('modus-operandi my-modus-themes-operandi-extra-color-overrides)
('modus-vivendi my-modus-themes-vivendi-extra-color-overrides)
(_ (error "No Modus theme is active")))))
(let (name cons colors)
(dolist (cons palette)
(setq name (color-saturate-name (cdr cons) percent))
(setq name (format "%s" name))
(setq cons `(,(car cons) . ,name))
(push cons colors))
(set overrides (append extra-overrides colors)))
(pcase theme
('modus-operandi (modus-themes-load-operandi))
('modus-vivendi (modus-themes-load-vivendi)))))
To disable the effect, one must reset the aforementioned variables of
the themes to nil. Or specify a command for it, such as by taking
inspiration from the modus-themes-toggle we already provide:
(defun my-modus-themes-revert-overrides ()
"Reset palette overrides and reload active Modus theme."
(interactive)
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides nil
modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides nil)
(pcase (modus-themes--current-theme)
('modus-operandi (modus-themes-load-operandi))
('modus-vivendi (modus-themes-load-vivendi))))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Override colors through blending, Next: Font configurations for Org and others, Prev: Override color saturation, Up: Advanced customization
5.11 Override colors through blending
=====================================
This is yet another method of overriding color values.
*note Override colors::.
*note Override color saturation::.
Building on ideas and concepts from the previous sections, this
method blends the entire palette at once with the chosen colors. The
function my-modus-themes-interpolate blends two colors, taking a value
from the themes and mixing it with a user-defined color to arrive at a
midpoint. This scales to all background and foreground colors with the
help of the my-modus-themes-tint-palette function.
(setq my-modus-operandi-bg-blend "#fbf1c7"
my-modus-operandi-fg-blend "#3a6084"
my-modus-vivendi-bg-blend "#3a4042"
my-modus-vivendi-fg-blend "#d7b765")
;; Adapted from the `kurecolor-interpolate' function of kurecolor.el
(defun my-modus-themes-interpolate (color1 color2)
(cl-destructuring-bind (r g b)
(mapcar #'(lambda (n) (* (/ n 2) 255.0))
(cl-mapcar '+ (color-name-to-rgb color1) (color-name-to-rgb color2)))
(format "#%02X%02X%02X" r g b)))
(defun my-modus-themes-tint-palette (palette bg-blend fg-blend)
"Modify Modus PALETTE programmatically and return a new palette.
Blend background colors with BG-BLEND and foreground colors with FG-BLEND."
(let (name cons colors)
(dolist (cons palette)
(let ((blend (if (string-match "bg" (symbol-name (car cons)))
bg-blend
fg-blend)))
(setq name (my-modus-themes-interpolate (cdr cons) blend)))
(setq name (format "%s" name))
(setq cons `(,(car cons) . ,name))
(push cons colors))
colors))
(define-minor-mode modus-themes-tinted-mode
"Tweak some Modus themes colors."
:init-value nil
:global t
(if modus-themes-tinted-mode
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides
(my-modus-themes-tint-palette modus-themes-operandi-colors
my-modus-operandi-bg-blend
my-modus-operandi-fg-blend)
modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides
(my-modus-themes-tint-palette modus-themes-vivendi-colors
my-modus-vivendi-bg-blend
my-modus-vivendi-fg-blend))
(setq modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides nil
modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides nil)))
(modus-themes-tinted-mode 1)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Font configurations for Org and others, Next: Configure bold and italic faces, Prev: Override colors through blending, Up: Advanced customization
5.12 Font configurations for Org and others
===========================================
The themes are designed to optionally cope well with mixed font
configurations. This mostly concerns org-mode and markdown-mode,
though expect to find it elsewhere like in Info-mode.
*note Option for font mixing: Mixed fonts.
In practice it means that the user can safely opt for a more
prose-friendly proportionately spaced typeface as their default, while
spacing-sensitive elements like tables and inline code always use a
monospaced font, by inheriting from the fixed-pitch face.
Users can try the built-in M-x variable-pitch-mode to see the
effect in action.
To make everything use your desired font families, you need to
configure the variable-pitch (proportional spacing) and fixed-pitch
(monospaced) faces respectively. It may also be convenient to set your
main typeface by configuring the default face the same way.
Put something like this in your initialization file (also consider
reading the doc string of set-face-attribute):
;; Main typeface
(set-face-attribute 'default nil :family "DejaVu Sans Mono" :height 110)
;; Proportionately spaced typeface
(set-face-attribute 'variable-pitch nil :family "DejaVu Serif" :height 1.0)
;; Monospaced typeface
(set-face-attribute 'fixed-pitch nil :family "DejaVu Sans Mono" :height 1.5)
Or employ the face-attribute function to read an existing value,
such as if you want to make fixed-pitch use the font family of the
default face:
(set-face-attribute 'fixed-pitch nil :family (face-attribute 'default :family))
The next section shows how to make those work in a more elaborate
setup that is robust to changes between the Modus themes.
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.
Note the differences in the :height property. The default face
must specify an absolute value, which is the point size × 10. So if you
want to use a font at point size 11, you set the height to 110.(1)
Whereas every other face must either not specify a height or have a
value that is relative to the default, represented as a floating point.
If you use an integer, then that means an absolute height. This is of
paramount importance: it ensures that all fonts can scale gracefully
when using something like the text-scale-adjust command which only
operates on the base font size (i.e. the default faces absolute
height).
*note Note for EWW and Elfeed fonts: Note on SHR fonts.
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) :height values do not need to be rounded to multiples of ten:
the likes of 115 are perfectly valid—some typefaces will change to
account for those finer increments.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Configure bold and italic faces, Next: Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces, Prev: Font configurations for Org and others, Up: Advanced customization
5.13 Configure bold and italic faces
====================================
The Modus themes do not hardcode a :weight or :slant attribute in
the thousands of faces they cover. Instead, they configure the generic
faces called bold and italic to use the appropriate styles and then
instruct all relevant faces that require emphasis to inherit from them.
This practically means that users can change the particularities of
what it means for a construct to be bold/italic, by tweaking the bold
and italic faces. Cases where that can be useful include:
• The default typeface does not have a variant with slanted glyphs
(e.g. Fira Mono/Code as of this writing on 2021-07-07), so the
user wants to add another family for the italics, such as Hack.
• The typeface of choice provides a multitude of weights and the user
prefers the light one by default. To prevent the bold weight from
being too heavy compared to the light one, they opt to make bold
use a semibold weight.
• The typeface distinguishes between oblique and italic forms by
providing different font variants (the former are just slanted
versions of the upright forms, while the latter have distinguishing
features as well). In this case, the user wants to specify the
font that applies to the italic face.
To achieve those effects, one must first be sure that the fonts they
use have support for those features. It then is a matter of following
the instructions for all typeface tweaks.
*note Font configurations for Org and others::.
In this example, we set the default font family to Fira Code, while
we choose to render italics in the Hack typeface (obviously you need to
pick fonts that work well together):
(set-face-attribute 'default nil :family "Fira Code" :height 110)
(set-face-attribute 'italic nil :family "Hack")
And here we play with different weights, using Source Code Pro:
(set-face-attribute 'default nil :family "Source Code Pro" :height 110 :weight 'light)
(set-face-attribute 'bold nil :weight 'semibold)
To reset the font family, one can use this:
(set-face-attribute 'italic nil :family 'unspecified)
To ensure that the effects persist after switching between the Modus
themes (such as with M-x modus-themes-toggle), the user needs to write
their configurations to a function and pass it to the
modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook. This is necessary because themes
set the styles of faces upon activation, overriding prior values where
conflicts occur between the previous and the current states (otherwise
changing themes would not be possible).
*note A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading::.
This is a minimal setup to preserve font configurations across theme
load phases. For a more permanent setup, it is better to rely on the
custom-set-faces function: set-face-attribute works just fine,
though it probably is better suited for quick previews or for smaller
scale operations (custom-set-faces follows the format used in the
source code of the themes, which can make it easier to redefine faces in
bulk).
;; our generic function
(defun my-modes-themes-bold-italic-faces ()
(set-face-attribute 'default nil :family "Source Code Pro" :height 110)
(set-face-attribute 'bold nil :weight 'semibold))
;; or use this if you configure a lot of face and attributes and
;; especially if you plan to use `modus-themes-with-colors', as shown
;; elsewhere in the manual
(defun my-modes-themes-bold-italic-faces ()
(custom-set-faces
'(default ((t :family "Source Code Pro" :height 110)))
'(bold ((t :weight semibold)))))
;; and here is the hook
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modes-themes-bold-italic-faces)
*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces, Next: Custom Org emphasis faces, Prev: Configure bold and italic faces, Up: Advanced customization
5.14 Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces
===============================================
Users of org-mode have the option to configure various keywords and
priority cookies to better match their workflow. User options are
org-todo-keyword-faces and org-priority-faces.
As those are meant to be custom faces, it is futile to have the
themes guess what each user wants to use, which keywords to target, and
so on. Instead, we can provide guidelines on how to customize things to
ones liking with the intent of retaining the overall aesthetic of the
themes.
Please bear in mind that the end result of those is not controlled by
the active Modus theme but by how Org maps faces to its constructs.
Editing those while org-mode is active requires re-initialization of
the mode with M-x org-mode-restart for changes to take effect.
Let us assume you wish to visually differentiate your keywords. You
have something like this:
(setq org-todo-keywords
'((sequence "TODO(t)" "|" "DONE(D)" "CANCEL(C)")
(sequence "MEET(m)" "|" "MET(M)")
(sequence "STUDY(s)" "|" "STUDIED(S)")
(sequence "WRITE(w)" "|" "WROTE(W)")))
You could then use a variant of the following to inherit from a face
that uses the styles you want and also to preserve the properties
applied by the org-todo face (in case there is a difference between
the two):
(setq org-todo-keyword-faces
'(("MEET" . '(bold org-todo))
("STUDY" . '(warning org-todo))
("WRITE" . '(shadow org-todo))))
This will refashion the keywords you specify, while letting the other
items in org-todo-keywords use their original styles (which are
defined in the org-todo and org-done faces).
If you want back the defaults, try specifying just the org-todo
face:
(setq org-todo-keyword-faces
'(("MEET" . org-todo)
("STUDY" . org-todo)
("WRITE" . org-todo)))
When you inherit from multiple faces, you need to quote the list as
shown further above. The order is significant: the first entry is
applied on top of the second, overriding any properties that are
explicitly set for both of them: any property that is not specified is
not overridden, so, for example, if org-todo has a background and a
foreground, while font-lock-type-face only has a foreground, the
merged face will include the background of the former and the foreground
of the latter. If you do not want to blend multiple faces, you do not
need a quoted list. A pattern of keyword . face will suffice.
Both approaches can be used simultaneously, as illustrated in this
configuration of the priority cookies:
(setq org-priority-faces
'((?A . '(bold org-priority))
(?B . org-priority)
(?C . '(shadow org-priority))))
To find all the faces that are loaded in your current Emacs session,
use M-x list-faces-display. Try M-x describe-variable as well and
then specify the name of each of those Org variables demonstrated above.
Their documentation strings will offer you further guidance.
Recall that the themes let you retrieve a color from their palette.
Do it if you plan to control face attributes.
*note Custom face specs using the themes palette: Case-by-case face
specs using the themes' palette.
*note Check color combinations: Measure color contrast.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Custom Org emphasis faces, Next: Update Org block delimiter fontification, Prev: Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces, Up: Advanced customization
5.15 Custom Org emphasis faces
==============================
Org provides the user option org-emphasis-alist which assosiates a
character with a face, list of faces, or face attributes. The default
specification of that variable looks like this:
(setq org-emphasis-alist
'(("*" bold)
("/" italic)
("_" underline)
("=" org-verbatim verbatim)
("~" org-code verbatim)
("+" (:strike-through t))))
With the exception of org-verbatim and org-code faces, everything
else uses the corresponding type of emphasis: a bold typographic weight,
or italicised, underlined, and struck through text.
The best way for users to add some extra attributes, such as a
foreground color, is to define their own faces and assign them to the
given emphasis marker/character.
This is a custom face that extends the standard bold face with a
red foreground value (so it colorises the text in addition to the bold
weight):
(defface my-org-emphasis-bold
'((default :inherit bold)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:foreground "#a60000")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:foreground "#ff8059"))
"My bold emphasis for Org.")
This face definition reads as follows:
• Always inherit the bold face (*note Configure bold and italic
faces::).
• For versions of Emacs that support at least 88 colors (graphical
Emacs, for example) and use a light background, apply the #a60000
value.
• For the same kind of Emacs that has a dark background use the
#ff8059 color instead.
Same principle for how to extend italic and underline with, for
example, green and yellow hues, respectively:
(defface my-org-emphasis-italic
'((default :inherit italic)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:foreground "#005e00")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:foreground "#44bc44"))
"My italic emphasis for Org.")
(defface my-org-emphasis-underline
'((default :inherit underline)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:foreground "#813e00")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:foreground "#d0bc00"))
"My underline emphasis for Org.")
In the case of a strike-through effect, we have no generic face to
inherit from, so we can write it as follows to also change the
foreground to a more subtle gray:
(defface my-org-emphasis-strike-through
'((default :strike-through t)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:foreground "#505050")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:foreground "#a8a8a8"))
"My strike-through emphasis for Org.")
Or we can just change the color of the line that strikes through the
text to, for example, a shade of red:
(defface my-org-emphasis-strike-through
'((((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:strike-through "#972500")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:strike-through "#ef8b50"))
"My strike-through emphasis for Org.")
It is possible to combine those effects:
(defface my-org-emphasis-strike-through
'((((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:strike-through "#972500" :foreground "#505050")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:strike-through "#ef8b50" :foreground "#a8a8a8"))
"My strike-through emphasis for Org.")
One may inspect the variables modus-themes-operandi-colors and
modus-themes-vivendi-colors for possible color values. Or call the
command modus-themes-list-colors to show a buffer that previews each
entry in the palette.
*note Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::.
Once we have defined the faces we need, we must update the
org-emphasis-alist. Given that org-verbatim and org-code are
already styled by the themes, it probably is best not to edit them:
(setq org-emphasis-alist
'(("*" my-org-emphasis-bold)
("/" my-org-emphasis-italic)
("_" my-org-emphasis-underline)
("=" org-verbatim verbatim)
("~" org-code verbatim)
("+" my-org-emphasis-strike-through)))
Thats it! For changes to take effect in already visited Org files,
invoke M-x org-mode-restart.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Update Org block delimiter fontification, Next: Measure color contrast, Prev: Custom Org emphasis faces, Up: Advanced customization
5.16 Update Org block delimiter fontification
=============================================
As noted in the section about modus-themes-org-blocks, Org contains a
variable that determines whether the blocks begin and end lines are
extended to the edge of the window (*note Option for org-mode block
styles: Org mode blocks.). The variable is
org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line.
Users who change the style of Org blocks from time to time may prefer
to automatically update delimiter line fontification, such as with the
following setup:
(defun my-modus-themes-org-fontify-block-delimiter-lines ()
"Match `org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line' to theme style.
Run this function at the post theme load phase, such as with the
`modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook'."
(if (eq modus-themes-org-blocks 'gray-background)
(setq org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line t)
(setq org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line nil)))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook
#'my-modus-themes-org-fontify-block-delimiter-lines)
Then M-x org-mode-restart for changes to take effect, though manual
intervention can be circumvented by tweaking the function thus:
(defun my-modus-themes-org-fontify-block-delimiter-lines ()
"Match `org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line' to theme style.
Run this function at the post theme load phase, such as with the
`modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook'."
(if (eq modus-themes-org-blocks 'gray-background)
(setq org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line t)
(setq org-fontify-whole-block-delimiter-line nil))
(when (derived-mode-p 'org-mode)
(font-lock-flush)))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Measure color contrast, Next: Load theme depending on time of day, Prev: Update Org block delimiter fontification, Up: Advanced customization
5.17 Measure color contrast
===========================
The themes provide the functions modus-themes-wcag-formula and
modus-themes-contrast. The former is a direct implementation of the
WCAG formula: <https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20-TECHS/G18.html>. It
calculates the relative luminance of a color value that is expressed in
hexadecimal RGB notation. While the latter function is just a
convenient wrapper for comparing the relative luminance between two
colors.
In practice, one needs to work only with modus-themes-contrast. It
accepts two color values and returns their contrast ratio. Values range
from 1 to 21 (lowest to highest). The themes are designed to always be
equal or higher than 7 for each combination of background and foreground
that they use (this is the WCAG AAA standard—the most demanding of its
kind).
A couple of examples (rounded numbers):
;; Pure white with pure green
(modus-themes-contrast "#ffffff" "#00ff00")
;; => 1.37
;; That is an outright inaccessible combo
;; Pure black with pure green
(modus-themes-contrast "#000000" "#00ff00")
;; => 15.3
;; That is a highly accessible combo
It does not matter which color value comes first. The ratio is
always the same.
If one does not wish to read all the decimal points, it is possible
to try something like this:
(format "%0.2f" (modus-themes-contrast "#000000" "#00ff00"))
While it is fine to perform such calculations on a case-by-case
basis, it is preferable to implement formulas and tables for more
demanding tasks. Such instruments are provided by org-mode or
orgtbl-mode, both of which are built into Emacs. Below is such a
table that derives the contrast ratio of all colors in the first column
(pure red, green, blue) relative to the color specified in the first row
of the second column (pure white) and rounds the results:
| | #ffffff |
|---------+---------|
| #ff0000 | 4.00 |
| #00ff00 | 1.37 |
| #0000ff | 8.59 |
#+tblfm: $2='(modus-themes-contrast $1 @1$2);%0.2f
To measure color contrast one needs to start from a known value.
This typically is the background. The Modus themes define an expanded
palette in large part because certain colors are only meant to be used
in combination with some others. Consult the source code for the
minutia and relevant commentary.
Such knowledge may prove valuable while attempting to override some
of the themes colors: *note Override colors::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Load theme depending on time of day, Next: Backdrop for pdf-tools, Prev: Measure color contrast, Up: Advanced customization
5.18 Load theme depending on time of day
========================================
While we do provide modus-themes-toggle to manually switch between the
themes, users may also set up their system to perform such a task
automatically at sunrise and sunset.
This can be accomplished by specifying the coordinates of ones
location using the built-in solar.el and then configuring the
circadian package:
(use-package solar ; built-in
:config
(setq calendar-latitude 35.17
calendar-longitude 33.36))
(use-package circadian ; you need to install this
:ensure
:after solar
(setq circadian-themes '((:sunrise . modus-operandi)
(:sunset . modus-vivendi)))
(circadian-setup))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Backdrop for pdf-tools, Next: Decrease mode line height, Prev: Load theme depending on time of day, Up: Advanced customization
5.19 Backdrop for pdf-tools
===========================
Most PDF files use a white background for their page, making it
impossible to discern the files boundaries in the buffer while using
the Modus Operandi theme. To introduce a distinction between the
buffers backdrop and the PDF pages background, the former must be
rendered as some shade of gray. Ideally, pdf-tools would provide a
face that the themes could support directly, though this does not seem
to be the case for the time being. We must thus employ the face
remapping technique that is documented elsewhere in this document to
change the buffer-local value of the default face.
*note Remap face with local value::.
To remap the buffers backdrop, we start with a function like this
one:
(defun my-pdf-tools-backdrop ()
(face-remap-add-relative
'default
`(:background ,(modus-themes-color 'bg-alt))))
(add-hook 'pdf-tools-enabled-hook #'my-pdf-tools-backdrop)
The idea is to assign that function to a hook that gets called when
pdf-tools renders the document: pdf-tools-enabled-hook. This is
enough when you only use one theme. However it has the downside of
setting the background color value only at render time. In other words,
the face remapping function does not get evaluated anew whenever the
theme changes, such as upon invoking M-x modus-themes-toggle.
To have our face remapping adapt gracefully while switching between
the Modus themes, we need to also account for the current theme and
control the activation of pdf-view-midnight-minor-mode. To which end
we arrive at something like the following, which builds on the above
example:
(defun my-pdf-tools-backdrop ()
(face-remap-add-relative
'default
`(:background ,(modus-themes-color 'bg-alt))))
(defun my-pdf-tools-midnight-mode-toggle ()
(when (derived-mode-p 'pdf-view-mode)
(if (eq (car custom-enabled-themes) 'modus-vivendi)
(pdf-view-midnight-minor-mode 1)
(pdf-view-midnight-minor-mode -1))
(my-pdf-tools-backdrop)))
(defun my-pdf-tools-themes-toggle ()
(mapc
(lambda (buf)
(with-current-buffer buf
(my-pdf-tools-midnight-mode-toggle)))
(buffer-list)))
(add-hook 'pdf-tools-enabled-hook #'my-pdf-tools-midnight-mode-toggle)
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-pdf-tools-themes-toggle)
With those in place, PDFs have a distinct backdrop for their page,
while buffers with major-mode as pdf-view-mode automatically switches
to dark mode when modus-themes-toggle is called.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Decrease mode line height, Next: Toggle themes without reloading them, Prev: Backdrop for pdf-tools, Up: Advanced customization
5.20 Decrease mode line height
==============================
By default, the mode line of the Modus themes is set to 1 pixel width
for its :box attribute. In contrast, the mode line of stock Emacs is
-1 pixel. This small difference is considered necessary for the
purposes of accessibility as our out-of-the-box design has a prominent
color around the mode line (a border) to make its boundaries clear.
With a negative width the border and the text on the mode line can feel
a bit more difficult to read under certain scenaria.
Furthermore, the user option modus-themes-mode-line (*note Mode
line::) does not allow for such a negative value because there are many
edge cases that simply make for a counter-intuitive set of
possibilities, such as a 0 value not being acceptable by the
underlying face infrastructure, and negative values greater than -2
not being particularly usable.
For these reasons, users who wish to decrease the overall height of
the mode line must handle things on their own by implementing the
methods for face customization documented herein.
*note Basic face customization: Case-by-case face specs using the
themes' palette.
One such method is to create a function that configures the desired
faces and hook it to modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook so that it
persists while switching between the Modus themes with the command
modus-themes-toggle.
This one simply disables the box altogether, which will reduce the
height of the mode lines, but also remove their border:
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(set-face-attribute 'mode-line nil :box nil)
(set-face-attribute 'mode-line-inactive nil :box nil))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
The above relies on the set-face-attribute function, though users
who plan to re-use colors from the theme and do so at scale are better
off with the more streamlined combination of the
modus-themes-with-colors macro and custom-set-faces.
*note Face customization at scale: Face specs at scale using the
themes' palette.
As explained before in this document, this approach has a syntax that
is consistent with the source code of the themes, so it probably is
easier to re-use parts of the design.
The following emulates the stock Emacs style, while still using the
colors of the Modus themes (whichever attribute is not explicitly stated
is inherited from the underlying theme):
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(mode-line ((,class :box (:line-width -1 :style released-button))))
`(mode-line-inactive ((,class :box (:line-width -1 :color ,bg-region)))))))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
And this one is like the out-of-the-box style of the Modus themes,
but with the -1 height instead of 1:
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(mode-line ((,class :box (:line-width -1 :color ,fg-alt))))
`(mode-line-inactive ((,class :box (:line-width -1 :color ,bg-region)))))))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
Finally, to also change the background color of the active mode line,
such as that it looks like the “accented” variant which is possible via
the user option modus-themes-mode-line, the :background attribute
needs to be specified as well:
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(mode-line ((,class :box (:line-width -1 :color ,fg-alt) :background ,bg-active-accent)))
`(mode-line-inactive ((,class :box (:line-width -1 :color ,bg-region)))))))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Toggle themes without reloading them, Next: A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading, Prev: Decrease mode line height, Up: Advanced customization
5.21 Toggle themes without reloading them
=========================================
Users who have a stable setup and who only ever need to toggle between
the themes without triggering a full reload, are better off defining
their own command which calls enable-theme instead of load-theme:
(defun my-modus-themes-toggle ()
"Toggle between `modus-operandi' and `modus-vivendi' themes.
This uses `enable-theme' instead of the standard method of
`load-theme'. The technicalities are covered in the Modus themes
manual."
(interactive)
(pcase (modus-themes--current-theme)
('modus-operandi (progn (enable-theme 'modus-vivendi)
(disable-theme 'modus-operandi)))
('modus-vivendi (progn (enable-theme 'modus-operandi)
(disable-theme 'modus-vivendi)))
(_ (error "No Modus theme is loaded; evaluate `modus-themes-load-themes' first"))))
*note Differences between loading and enabling::.
Recall that modus-themes-toggle uses load-theme.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading, Next: Diffs with only the foreground, Prev: Toggle themes without reloading them, Up: Advanced customization
5.22 A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading
============================================
The themes are designed with the intent to be useful to Emacs users of
varying skill levels, from beginners to experts. This means that we try
to make things easier by not expecting anyone reading this document to
be proficient in Emacs Lisp or programming in general.
Such a case is with the use of the
modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook, which runs after
modus-themes-toggle, modus-themes-load-operandi, or
modus-themes-load-vivendi is evaluated. We recommend using that hook
for advanced customizations, because (1) we know for sure that it is
available once the themes are loaded, and (2) anyone consulting this
manual, especially the sections on enabling and loading the themes, will
be in a good position to benefit from that hook.
Advanced users who have a need to switch between the Modus themes and
other items will find that such a hook does not meet their requirements:
it only works with the Modus themes and only with the aforementioned
functions.
A theme-agnostic setup can be configured thus:
(defvar after-enable-theme-hook nil
"Normal hook run after enabling a theme.")
(defun run-after-enable-theme-hook (&rest _args)
"Run `after-enable-theme-hook'."
(run-hooks 'after-enable-theme-hook))
(advice-add 'enable-theme :after #'run-after-enable-theme-hook)
This creates the after-enable-theme-hook and makes it run after
each call to enable-theme, which means that it will work for all
themes and also has the benefit that it does not depend on functions
such as modus-themes-toggle and the others mentioned above.
enable-theme is called internally by load-theme, so the hook works
everywhere.
Now this specific piece of Elisp may be simple for experienced users,
but it is not easy to read for newcomers, including the author of the
Modus themes for the first several months of their time as an Emacs
user. Hence our hesitation to recommend it as part of the standard
setup of the Modus themes (it is generally a good idea to understand
what the implications are of advising a function).

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Diffs with only the foreground, Next: Ediff without diff color-coding, Prev: A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading, Up: Advanced customization
5.23 Diffs with only the foreground
===================================
Buffers that show differences between versions of a file or buffer, such
as in diff-mode and ediff always use color-coded background and
foreground combinations.
*note Option for diff buffer looks: Diffs.
User may, however, prefer a style that removes the color-coded
backgrounds from regular changes while keeping them for word-wise (aka
“refined”) changes—backgrounds for word-wise diffs are helpful in
context. To make this happen, one can use the
modus-themes-with-colors macro (*note Face specs at scale using the
themes' palette::):
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(modus-themes-diff-added ((,class :background unspecified :foreground ,green))) ; OR ,blue for deuteranopia
`(modus-themes-diff-changed ((,class :background unspecified :foreground ,yellow)))
`(modus-themes-diff-removed ((,class :background unspecified :foreground ,red)))
`(modus-themes-diff-refine-added ((,class :background ,bg-diff-added :foreground ,fg-diff-added)))
;; `(modus-themes-diff-refine-added ((,class :background ,bg-diff-added-deuteran :foreground ,fg-diff-added-deuteran)))
`(modus-themes-diff-refine-changed ((,class :background ,bg-diff-changed :foreground ,fg-diff-changed)))
`(modus-themes-diff-refine-removed ((,class :background ,bg-diff-removed :foreground ,fg-diff-removed)))
`(modus-themes-diff-focus-added ((,class :background ,bg-dim :foreground ,green))) ; OR ,blue for deuteranopia
`(modus-themes-diff-focus-changed ((,class :background ,bg-dim :foreground ,yellow)))
`(modus-themes-diff-focus-removed ((,class :background ,bg-dim :foreground ,red)))
`(modus-themes-diff-heading ((,class :background ,bg-alt :foreground ,fg-main)))
`(diff-indicator-added ((,class :foreground ,green))) ; OR ,blue for deuteranopia
`(diff-indicator-changed ((,class :foreground ,yellow)))
`(diff-indicator-removed ((,class :foreground ,red)))
`(magit-diff-added ((,class :background unspecified :foreground ,green-faint)))
`(magit-diff-changed ((,class :background unspecified :foreground ,yellow-faint)))
`(magit-diff-removed ((,class :background unspecified :foreground ,red-faint)))
`(magit-diff-context-highlight ((,class :background ,bg-dim :foreground ,fg-dim))))))
;; This is so that the changes persist when switching between
;; `modus-operandi' and `modus-vivendi'.
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
This used to be an optional style of modus-themes-diffs, but has
been removed since version 2.0.0 to ensure that the accessibility
standard and aesthetic quality of the themes is not compromised.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Ediff without diff color-coding, Next: Near-monochrome syntax highlighting, Prev: Diffs with only the foreground, Up: Advanced customization
5.24 Ediff without diff color-coding
====================================
Ediff uses the same color-coding as ordinary diffs in diff-mode,
Magit, etc. (*note Option for diff buffer looks: Diffs.). This is
consistent with the principle of least surprise.
Users may, however, prefer to treat Ediff differently on the premise
that it does not need any particular color-coding to show added or
removed lines/words: it does not use the + or - markers, after all.
This can be achieved by customizing the Ediff faces with color
combinations that do not carry the same connotations as those of diffs.
Consider this example, which leverages the modus-themes-with-colors
macro (*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::):
(defun my-modus-themes-custom-faces ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(ediff-current-diff-A ((,class :inherit unspecified :background ,bg-special-faint-cold :foreground ,fg-special-cold)))
`(ediff-current-diff-B ((,class :inherit unspecified :background ,bg-special-faint-warm :foreground ,fg-special-warm)))
`(ediff-current-diff-C ((,class :inherit unspecified :background ,bg-special-faint-calm :foreground ,fg-special-calm)))
`(ediff-fine-diff-A ((,class :inherit unspecified :background ,bg-special-cold :foreground ,fg-special-cold)))
`(ediff-fine-diff-B ((,class :inherit unspecified :background ,bg-special-warm :foreground ,fg-special-warm)))
`(ediff-fine-diff-C ((,class :inherit unspecified :background ,bg-special-calm :foreground ,fg-special-calm))))))
;; This is so that the changes persist when switching between
;; `modus-operandi' and `modus-vivendi'.
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-custom-faces)
Remove the :foreground and its value to preserve the underlying
coloration.
*note Visualize the active Modus theme's palette::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Near-monochrome syntax highlighting, Prev: Ediff without diff color-coding, Up: Advanced customization
5.25 Near-monochrome syntax highlighting
========================================
While the Modus themes do provide a user option to control the overall
style of syntax highlighting in programming major modes, they do not
cover the possibility of a monochromatic or near-monochromatic design
(*note Option for syntax highlighting: Syntax styles.). This is due to
the multitude of preferences involved: one may like comments to be
styled with an accent value, another may want certain constructs to be
bold, a third may apply italics to doc strings but not comments... The
possibilities are virtually endless. As such, this sort of design is
best handled at the user level in accordance with the information
furnished elsewhere in this manual.
*note Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette::.
*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::.
The gist is that we want to override the font-lock faces. For our
changes to persist while switching between modus-operandi and
modus-vivendi we wrap our face overrides in a function that we hook to
modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook.
Users who want to replicate the structure of the themes source code
are advised to use the examples with custom-set-faces. Those who
prefer a different approach can use the snippets which call
set-face-attribute. Below are the code blocks.
The following uses a yellow accent value for comments and green hues
for strings. Regexp grouping constructs have color values that work in
the context of a green string. All other elements use the main
foreground color, except warnings such as the user-error function in
Elisp buffers which gets a subtle red tint (not to be confused with the
warning face which is used for genuine warnings). Furthermore, notice
the modus-themes-bold and modus-themes-slant which apply the
preference set in the user options modus-themes-bold-constructs and
modus-themes-italic-constructs, respectively. Users who do not want
this conditionally must replace these faces with bold and italic
respectively (or unspecified to disable the effect altogether).
;; This is the hook. It will not be replicated across all code samples.
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-subtle-syntax)
(defun my-modus-themes-subtle-syntax ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(font-lock-builtin-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-comment-delimiter-face ((,class :inherit font-lock-comment-face)))
`(font-lock-comment-face ((,class :inherit unspecified :foreground ,fg-comment-yellow)))
`(font-lock-constant-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-doc-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-slant :foreground ,fg-special-mild)))
`(font-lock-function-name-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-keyword-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-negation-char-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-preprocessor-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-regexp-grouping-backslash ((,class :inherit bold :foreground ,yellow)))
`(font-lock-regexp-grouping-construct ((,class :inherit bold :foreground ,blue-alt-other)))
`(font-lock-string-face ((,class :foreground ,green-alt-other)))
`(font-lock-type-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-variable-name-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-warning-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground ,red-nuanced-fg))))))
;; Same as above with `set-face-attribute' instead of `custom-set-faces'
(defun my-modus-themes-subtle-syntax ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-builtin-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-comment-delimiter-face nil :inherit 'font-lock-comment-face)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-comment-face nil :inherit 'unspecified :foreground fg-comment-yellow)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-constant-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-doc-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-slant :foreground fg-special-mild)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-function-name-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-keyword-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-negation-char-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-preprocessor-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-regexp-grouping-backslash nil :inherit 'bold :foreground yellow)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-regexp-grouping-construct nil :inherit 'bold :foreground blue-alt-other)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-string-face nil :foreground green-alt-other)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-type-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-variable-name-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-warning-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground red-nuanced-fg)))
The following sample is the same as above, except strings are blue
and comments are gray. Regexp constructs are adapted accordingly.
(defun my-modus-themes-subtle-syntax ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(font-lock-builtin-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-comment-delimiter-face ((,class :inherit font-lock-comment-face)))
`(font-lock-comment-face ((,class :inherit unspecified :foreground ,fg-alt)))
`(font-lock-constant-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-doc-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-slant :foreground ,fg-docstring)))
`(font-lock-function-name-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-keyword-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-negation-char-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-preprocessor-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-regexp-grouping-backslash ((,class :inherit bold :foreground ,fg-escape-char-backslash)))
`(font-lock-regexp-grouping-construct ((,class :inherit bold :foreground ,fg-escape-char-construct)))
`(font-lock-string-face ((,class :foreground ,blue-alt)))
`(font-lock-type-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-variable-name-face ((,class :foreground unspecified)))
`(font-lock-warning-face ((,class :inherit modus-themes-bold :foreground ,red-nuanced-fg))))))
;; Same as above with `set-face-attribute' instead of `custom-set-faces'
(defun my-modus-themes-subtle-syntax ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-builtin-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-comment-delimiter-face nil :inherit 'font-lock-comment-face)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-comment-face nil :inherit 'unspecified :foreground fg-alt)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-constant-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-doc-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-slant :foreground fg-docstring)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-function-name-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-keyword-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-negation-char-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-preprocessor-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-regexp-grouping-backslash nil :inherit 'bold :foreground fg-escape-char-backslash)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-regexp-grouping-construct nil :inherit 'bold :foreground fg-escape-char-construct)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-string-face nil :foreground blue-alt)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-type-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-variable-name-face nil :foreground 'unspecified)
(set-face-attribute 'font-lock-warning-face nil :inherit 'modus-themes-bold :foreground red-nuanced-fg)))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Face coverage, Next: Notes on individual packages, Prev: Advanced customization, Up: Top
6 Face coverage
***************
The Modus themes try to provide as close to full face coverage as
possible. This is necessary to ensure a consistently accessible reading
experience across all available interfaces.
* Menu:
* Supported packages:: Full list of covered face groups
* Indirectly covered packages::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Supported packages, Next: Indirectly covered packages, Up: Face coverage
6.1 Full support for packages or face groups
============================================
This list will always be updated to reflect the current state of the
project. The idea is to offer an overview of the known status of all
affected face groups. The items with an appended asterisk * tend to
have lots of extensions, so the “full support” may not be 100% true…
• ace-window
• alert
• all-the-icons
• all-the-icons-dired
• all-the-icons-ibuffer
• annotate
• ansi-color
• anzu
• apropos
• artbollocks-mode
• auctex and TeX
• auto-dim-other-buffers
• avy
• awesome-tray
• bbdb
• binder
• bm
• bongo
• boon
• bookmark
• breakpoint (provided by the built-in gdb-mi.el library)
• calendar and diary
• calfw
• centaur-tabs
• cfrs
• change-log and log-view (such as vc-print-log,
vc-print-root-log)
• cider
• circe
• citar
• color-rg
• column-enforce-mode
• company-mode*
• company-posframe
• compilation-mode
• completions
• consult
• corfu
• corfu-quick [ part of 2.4.0-dev ]
• counsel*
• counsel-css
• cov
• cperl-mode
• css-mode
• csv-mode
• ctrlf
• cursor-flash
• custom (what you get with M-x customize)
• dap-mode
• dashboard (emacs-dashboard)
• deadgrep
• debbugs
• deft
• devdocs
• dictionary
• diff-hl
• diff-mode
• dim-autoload
• dir-treeview
• dired
• dired-async
• dired-git
• dired-git-info
• dired-narrow
• dired-subtree
• diredfl
• diredp (dired+)
• display-fill-column-indicator-mode
• doom-modeline
• dynamic-ruler
• easy-jekyll
• ebdb
• ediff
• eglot
• el-search
• eldoc-box
• elfeed
• elfeed-score
• elpher
• embark
• ement
• emms
• enh-ruby-mode (enhanced-ruby-mode)
• epa
• equake
• erc
• eros
• ert
• eshell
• eshell-fringe-status
• eshell-git-prompt
• eshell-prompt-extras (epe)
• eshell-syntax-highlighting
• evil* (evil-mode)
• evil-goggles
• evil-snipe
• evil-visual-mark-mode
• eww
• exwm
• eyebrowse
• fancy-dabbrev
• flycheck
• flycheck-color-mode-line
• flycheck-indicator
• flycheck-posframe
• flymake
• flyspell
• flx
• freeze-it
• frog-menu
• focus
• fold-this
• font-lock (generic syntax highlighting)
• forge
• fountain (fountain-mode)
• geiser
• git-commit
• git-gutter (and variants)
• git-rebase
• git-timemachine
• gnus
• gotest
• golden-ratio-scroll-screen
• helm*
• helm-ls-git
• helm-switch-shell
• helm-xref
• helpful
• highlight-indentation
• highlight-numbers
• highlight-parentheses (*note Note on highlight-parentheses.el: Note
on highlight-parenthesesel.)
• highlight-thing
• hl-defined
• hl-fill-column
• hl-line-mode
• hl-todo
• hydra
• ibuffer
• icomplete
• icomplete-vertical
• ido-mode
• iedit
• iflipb
• image-dired
• imenu-list
• indium
• info
• info-colors
• interaction-log
• ioccur
• isearch, occur, etc.
• ivy*
• ivy-posframe
• jira (org-jira)
• journalctl-mode
• js2-mode
• julia
• jupyter
• kaocha-runner
• keycast
• ledger-mode
• line numbers (display-line-numbers-mode and global variant)
• lsp-mode
• lsp-ui
• macrostep
• magit
• magit-imerge
• make-mode
• man
• marginalia
• markdown-mode
• markup-faces (adoc-mode)
• mct
• mentor
• messages
• mini-modeline
• minimap
• mmm-mode
• mode-line
• mood-line
• moody
• mpdel
• mu4e
• multiple-cursors
• nano-modeline
• neotree
• notmuch
• num3-mode
• nxml-mode
• orderless
• org*
• org-journal
• org-noter
• org-pomodoro
• org-recur
• org-roam
• org-superstar
• org-table-sticky-header
• org-tree-slide
• org-treescope
• origami
• outline-mode
• outline-minor-faces
• package (what you get with M-x list-packages)
• page-break-lines
• pandoc-mode
• paradox
• paren-face
• pass
• pdf-tools
• persp-mode
• perspective
• phi-grep
• pomidor
• popup
• powerline
• powerline-evil
• prism (*note Note for prism.el: Note for prism.)
• proced
• prodigy
• pulse
• pyim
• quick-peek
• racket-mode
• rainbow-blocks
• rainbow-delimiters
• rcirc
• recursion-indicator
• regexp-builder (also known as re-builder)
• rg (rg.el)
• ripgrep
• rmail
• ruler-mode
• selectrum
• selectrum-prescient
• semantic
• sesman
• shell-script-mode
• shortdoc
• show-paren-mode
• shr
• side-notes
• sieve-mode
• skewer-mode
• slime (slbd)
• sly
• smart-mode-line
• smartparens
• smerge
• solaire
• spaceline
• speedbar
• stripes
• suggest
• switch-window
• swiper
• sx
• symbol-overlay
• syslog-mode
• tab-bar-groups
• tab-bar-mode
• tab-line-mode
• table (built-in table.el)
• telega
• telephone-line
• terraform-mode
• term
• textsec
• tomatinho
• transient (pop-up windows such as Magits)
• trashed
• tree-sitter
• treemacs
• tty-menu
• tuareg
• typescript
• undo-tree
• vc (vc-dir.el, vc-hooks.el)
• vc-annotate (the output of C-x v g)
• vertico
• vertico-quick
• vimish-fold
• visible-mark
• visual-regexp
• vterm
• vundo [ part of 2.4.0-dev ]
• wcheck-mode
• web-mode
• wgrep
• which-function-mode
• which-key
• whitespace-mode
• window-divider-mode
• winum
• writegood-mode
• woman
• xah-elisp-mode
• xref
• xterm-color (and ansi-colors)
• yaml-mode
• yasnippet
• ztree
Plus many other miscellaneous faces that are provided by the upstream
GNU Emacs distribution.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Indirectly covered packages, Prev: Supported packages, Up: Face coverage
6.2 Indirectly covered packages
===============================
These do not require any extra styles because they are configured to
inherit from some basic faces or their dependencies which are directly
supported by the themes.
• ag
• apt-sources-list
• buffer-expose
• bufler
• counsel-notmuch
• counsel-org-capture-string
• define-word
• disk-usage
• dtache
• easy-kill
• edit-indirect
• egerrit
• elfeed-summary
• evil-owl
• flyspell-correct
• fortran-mode
• git-walktree
• goggles
• highlight-defined
• highlight-escape-sequences (hes-mode)
• i3wm-config-mode
• minibuffer-line
• no-emoji
• org-remark
• parrot
• perl-mode
• php-mode
• rjsx-mode
• side-hustle
• spell-fu
• swift-mode
• tab-bar-echo-area
• tide
• undo-hl
• vdiff
• vertico-indexed
• vertico-mouse

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Notes on individual packages, Next: Frequently Asked Questions, Prev: Face coverage, Up: Top
7 Notes on individual packages
******************************
This section covers information that may be of interest to users of
individual packages.
* Menu:
* Note on avy hints::
* Note on calendar.el weekday and weekend colors: Note on calendarel weekday and weekend colors.
* Note on underlines in compilation buffers::
* Note on inline Latex in Org buffers::
* Note on dimmer.el: Note on dimmerel.
* Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode::
* Note on highlight-parentheses.el: Note on highlight-parenthesesel.
* Note on mmm-mode.el background colors: Note on mmm-modeel background colors.
* Note for prism::
* Note for god-mode::
* Note on company-mode overlay pop-up::
* Note on ERC escaped color sequences::
* Note on powerline or spaceline::
* Note on SHR colors::
* Note on SHR fonts::
* Note on Ement colors and fonts::
* Note on Helm grep::
* Note on vc-annotate-background-mode::
* Note on pdf-tools link hints::
* Note on the Notmuch logo::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on avy hints, Next: Note on calendarel weekday and weekend colors, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.1 Note on avy hints
=====================
Hints can appear everywhere, in wildly varying contexts, hence, their
appearance, by necessity, is a compromise. However, there are various
options for making them stand out. First is dimming the surroundings:
(setq avy-background t)
Dimming works well when you find it difficult to spot hints, any
hint. Second is limiting the number of faces used by hints:
(setq avy-lead-faces
'(avy-lead-face
avy-lead-face-1
avy-lead-face-1
avy-lead-face-1
avy-lead-face-1))
Limiting the number of faces works well with longer hints when you
find it difficult to identify individual hints, especially with hints
touching each other. The first character of the hint will have an
intense color, the remaining ones the same neutral color.
Third is preferring commands that produce fewer candidates. Fewer
hints is less noise: avy-goto-char-timer is an excellent alternative
to avy-goto-char.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on calendarel weekday and weekend colors, Next: Note on underlines in compilation buffers, Prev: Note on avy hints, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.2 Note on calendar.el weekday and weekend colors
==================================================
By default, the M-x calendar interface differentiates weekdays from
weekends by applying a gray color to the former and a faint red to the
latter. The idea for this approach is that the weekend should serve as
a subtle warning that no work is supposed to be done on that day, per
the design of traditional calendars.
Users who prefer all days to look the same can configure the variable
calendar-weekend-days to either use gray of weekdays or the faint red
of weekends uniformly.
;; All are treated like weekdays (gray color)
(setq calendar-weekend-days nil)
;; All are treated like weekends (red-faint color)
(setq calendar-weekend-days (number-sequence 0 6))
;; The default marks the Saturday and Sunday as the weekend
(setq calendar-weekend-days '(0 6))
For changes to take effect, the Calendar buffer needs to be generated
anew.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on underlines in compilation buffers, Next: Note on inline Latex in Org buffers, Prev: Note on calendarel weekday and weekend colors, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.3 Note on underlines in compilation buffers
=============================================
Various buffers that produce compilation results or run tests on code
apply an underline to the file names they reference or to relevant
messages. Users may consider this unnecessary or excessive.
To outright disable the effect, use this (buffers need to be
generated anew):
(setq compilation-message-face nil)
If some element of differentiation is still desired, a good option is
to render the affected text with the italic face:
(setq compilation-message-face 'italic)
*note Configure bold and italic faces::.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on inline Latex in Org buffers, Next: Note on dimmerel, Prev: Note on underlines in compilation buffers, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.4 Note on inline Latex in Org buffers
=======================================
Org can work with inline latex and related syntax. To actually fontify
those constructs, set the variable org-highlight-latex-and-related to
the desired list of values (per its doc string). For example:
(setq org-highlight-latex-and-related '(latex script))
Remember to use M-x org-mode-restart for changes to take effect.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on dimmerel, Next: Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode, Prev: Note on inline Latex in Org buffers, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.5 Note on dimmer.el
=====================
The dimmer.el library by Neil Okamoto can be configured to
automatically dim the colors of inactive Emacs windows. To guarantee
consistent results with the Modus themes, we suggest some tweaks to the
default styles, such as in this minimal setup:
(use-package dimmer
:config
(setq dimmer-fraction 0.3)
(setq dimmer-adjustment-mode :foreground)
(setq dimmer-use-colorspace :rgb)
(dimmer-mode 1))
Of the above, we strongly recommend the RGB color space because it is
the one that remains faithful to the hueness of the colors used by the
themes. Whereas the default CIELAB space has a tendency to distort
colors in addition to applying the dim effect, which can be somewhat
disorienting.
The value of the dimmer-fraction has been selected empirically.
Users might prefer to tweak it further (increasing it makes the dim
effect more pronounced).
Changing the dimmer-adjustment-mode is a matter of preference.
Though because the Modus themes use black and white as their base
colors, any other value for that variable will turn the main background
gray. This inadvertently leads to the opposite of the intended utility
of this package: it draws too much attention to unfocused windows.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode, Next: Note on highlight-parenthesesel, Prev: Note on dimmerel, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.6 Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode
==============================================
The display-fill-column-indicator-mode uses a typographic character to
draw its line. This has the downside of creating a dashed line. The
dashes are further apart depending on how tall the fonts glyph height
is and what integer the line-spacing is set to.
At the theme level we eliminate this effect by making the character
one pixel tall: the line is contiguous. Users who prefer the dashed
line are advised to change the fill-column-indicator face, as
explained elsewhere in this document. For example:
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(fill-column-indicator ((,class :foreground ,bg-active)))))
*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::.
To make the line thicker, set the height to be equal to the base font
size instead of the one pixel we use. This is done by specifying a rate
instead of an absolute number, as in :height 1.0 versus :height 1.
For example:
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(fill-column-indicator ((,class :height 1.0 :background ,bg-inactive :foreground ,bg-inactive)))))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on highlight-parenthesesel, Next: Note on mmm-modeel background colors, Prev: Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.7 Note on highlight-parentheses.el
====================================
The highlight-parentheses package provides contextual coloration of
surrounding parentheses, highlighting only those which are around the
point. The package expects users to customize the applicable colors on
their own by configuring certain variables.
To make the Modus themes work as expected with this, we need to use
some of the techniques that are discussed at length in the various
“Do-It-Yourself” (DIY) sections, which provide insight into the more
advanced customization options of the themes.
*note Advanced customization::.
In the following example, we are assuming that the user wants to (i)
re-use color variables provided by the themes, (ii) be able to retain
their tweaks while switching between modus-operandi and
modus-vivendi, and (iii) have the option to highlight either the
foreground of the parentheses or the background as well.
We start by defining our own variable, which will serve as a toggle
between foreground and background coloration styles:
(defvar my-highlight-parentheses-use-background t
"Prefer `highlight-parentheses-background-colors'.")
Then we can update our preference with this:
;; Set to nil to disable backgrounds.
(setq my-highlight-parentheses-use-background nil)
To re-use colors from the themes, we must wrap our code in the
modus-themes-with-colors macro. Our implementation must interface
with the variables highlight-parentheses-background-colors and/or
highlight-parentheses-colors.
So we can have something like this (the doc string of
modus-themes-with-colors explains where the names of the colors can be
found):
(modus-themes-with-colors
;; Our preference for setting either background or foreground
;; styles, depending on `my-highlight-parentheses-use-background'.
(if my-highlight-parentheses-use-background
;; Here we set color combinations that involve both a background
;; and a foreground value.
(setq highlight-parentheses-background-colors (list cyan-refine-bg
magenta-refine-bg
green-refine-bg
yellow-refine-bg)
highlight-parentheses-colors (list cyan-refine-fg
magenta-refine-fg
green-refine-fg
yellow-refine-fg))
;; And here we pass only foreground colors while disabling any
;; backgrounds.
(setq highlight-parentheses-colors (list green-intense
magenta-intense
blue-intense
red-intense)
highlight-parentheses-background-colors nil)))
;; Include this if you also want to make the parentheses bold:
(set-face-attribute 'highlight-parentheses-highlight nil :inherit 'bold)
;; Our changes must be evaluated before enabling the relevant mode, so
;; this comes last.
(global-highlight-parentheses-mode 1)
For our changes to persist while switching between the Modus themes,
we need to include them in a function which can then get passed to
modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook. This is the complete
implementation:
;; Configurations for `highlight-parentheses':
(require 'highlight-parentheses)
(defvar my-highlight-parentheses-use-background t
"Prefer `highlight-parentheses-background-colors'.")
(setq my-highlight-parentheses-use-background nil) ; Set to nil to disable backgrounds
(defun my-modus-themes-highlight-parentheses ()
(modus-themes-with-colors
;; Our preference for setting either background or foreground
;; styles, depending on `my-highlight-parentheses-use-background'.
(if my-highlight-parentheses-use-background
;; Here we set color combinations that involve both a background
;; and a foreground value.
(setq highlight-parentheses-background-colors (list cyan-refine-bg
magenta-refine-bg
green-refine-bg
yellow-refine-bg)
highlight-parentheses-colors (list cyan-refine-fg
magenta-refine-fg
green-refine-fg
yellow-refine-fg))
;; And here we pass only foreground colors while disabling any
;; backgrounds.
(setq highlight-parentheses-colors (list green-intense
magenta-intense
blue-intense
red-intense)
highlight-parentheses-background-colors nil)))
;; Include this if you also want to make the parentheses bold:
(set-face-attribute 'highlight-parentheses-highlight nil :inherit 'bold)
;; Our changes must be evaluated before enabling the relevant mode, so
;; this comes last.
(global-highlight-parentheses-mode 1))
(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'my-modus-themes-highlight-parentheses)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on mmm-modeel background colors, Next: Note for prism, Prev: Note on highlight-parenthesesel, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.8 Note on mmm-mode.el background colors
=========================================
The faces used by mmm-mode.el are expected to have a colorful
background, while they should not touch any foreground value. The idea
is that they must not interfere with existing fontification. Those
background colors need to be distinct from each other, such as an
unambiguous red juxtaposed with a clear blue.
While this design may be internally consistent with the raison dêtre
of that library, it inevitably produces inaccessible color combinations.
There are two competing goals at play:
1. Legibility of the text, understood as the contrast ratio between
the background and the foreground.
2. Semantic precision of each face which entails faithfulness to
color-coding of the underlying background.
As the Modus themes are designed with the express purpose of
conforming with the first point, we have to forgo the apparent
color-coding of the background elements. Instead we use subtle colors
that do not undermine the legibility of the affected text while they
still offer a sense of added context.
Users who might prefer to fall below the minimum 7:1 contrast ratio
in relative luminance (the accessibility target we conform with), can
opt to configure the relevant faces on their own.
*note Face specs at scale using the themes' palette::.
This example uses more vivid background colors, though it comes at
the very high cost of degraded legibility.
(modus-themes-with-colors
(custom-set-faces
`(mmm-cleanup-submode-face ((,class :background ,yellow-refine-bg)))
`(mmm-code-submode-face ((,class :background ,bg-active)))
`(mmm-comment-submode-face ((,class :background ,blue-refine-bg)))
`(mmm-declaration-submode-face ((,class :background ,cyan-refine-bg)))
`(mmm-default-submode-face ((,class :background ,bg-alt)))
`(mmm-init-submode-face ((,class :background ,magenta-refine-bg)))
`(mmm-output-submode-face ((,class :background ,red-refine-bg)))
`(mmm-special-submode-face ((,class :background ,green-refine-bg)))))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note for prism, Next: Note for god-mode, Prev: Note on mmm-modeel background colors, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.9 Note on prism.el
====================
This package by Adam Porter, aka “alphapapa” or “github-alphapapa”,
implements an alternative to the typical coloration of code. Instead of
highlighting the syntactic constructs, it applies color to different
levels of depth in the code structure.
As prism.el offers a broad range of customizations, we cannot style
it directly at the theme level: that would run contrary to the spirit of
the package. Instead, we may offer preset color schemes. Those should
offer a starting point for users to adapt to their needs.
In the following code snippets, we employ the
modus-themes-with-colors macro: *note Face specs at scale using the
themes' palette::.
These are the minimum recommended settings with 16 colors:
(setq prism-num-faces 16)
(prism-set-colors
:desaturations '(0) ; do not change---may lower the contrast ratio
:lightens '(0) ; same
:colors (modus-themes-with-colors
(list fg-main
magenta
cyan-alt-other
magenta-alt-other
blue
magenta-alt
cyan-alt
red-alt-other
green
fg-main
cyan
yellow
blue-alt
red-alt
green-alt-other
fg-special-warm)))
With 8 colors:
(setq prism-num-faces 8)
(prism-set-colors
:desaturations '(0) ; do not change---may lower the contrast ratio
:lightens '(0) ; same
:colors (modus-themes-with-colors
(list blue
magenta
magenta-alt-other
cyan-alt-other
fg-main
blue-alt
red-alt-other
cyan)))
And this is with 4 colors, which produces results that are the
closest to the themes default aesthetic:
(setq prism-num-faces 4)
(prism-set-colors
:desaturations '(0) ; do not change---may lower the contrast ratio
:lightens '(0) ; same
:colors (modus-themes-with-colors
(list blue
magenta
magenta-alt-other
green-alt)))
If you need to apply desaturation and lightening, you can use what
the prism.el documentation recommends, like this (adapting to the
examples with the 4, 8, 16 colors):
(prism-set-colors
:desaturations (cl-loop for i from 0 below 16 collect (* i 2.5))
:lightens (cl-loop for i from 0 below 16 collect (* i 2.5))
:colors (modus-themes-with-colors
(list fg-main
cyan-alt-other
magenta-alt-other
magenta)))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note for god-mode, Next: Note on company-mode overlay pop-up, Prev: Note for prism, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.10 Note on god-mode.el
========================
The god-mode library does not provide faces that could be configured
by the Modus themes. Users who would like to get some visual feedback
on the status of M-x god-mode are instead encouraged by upstream to
set up their own configurations, such as by changing the mode-line
face (*note Advanced customization::). This is an adaptation of the
approach followed in the upstream README:
(defun my-god-mode-update-mode-line ()
"Make `mode-line' blue if God local mode is active."
(modus-themes-with-colors
(if god-local-mode
(set-face-attribute 'mode-line nil
:foreground blue-active
:background bg-active-accent
:box blue)
(set-face-attribute 'mode-line nil
:foreground fg-active
:background bg-active
:box fg-alt))))
(add-hook 'post-command-hook 'my-god-mode-update-mode-line)
We employ the modus-themes-with-colors which provides access to
color variables defined by the active theme. Its use is covered
elsewhere in this manual (*note Face specs at scale using the themes'
palette::). As for the attributes that can be passed to each face,
start by consulting the documentation string of set-face-attribute.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on company-mode overlay pop-up, Next: Note on ERC escaped color sequences, Prev: Note for god-mode, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.11 Note on company-mode overlay pop-up
========================================
By default, the company-mode pop-up that lists completion candidates
is drawn using an overlay. This creates alignment issues every time it
is placed above a piece of text that has a different height than the
default.
The solution recommended by the projects maintainer is to use an
alternative front-end for drawing the pop-up which draws child frames
instead of overlays.(1)(2)
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) <https://github.com/company-mode/company-mode/issues/1010>
(2) <https://github.com/tumashu/company-posframe/>

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on ERC escaped color sequences, Next: Note on powerline or spaceline, Prev: Note on company-mode overlay pop-up, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.12 Note on ERC escaped color sequences
========================================
The built-in IRC client erc has the ability to colorise any text using
escape sequences that start with ^C (inserted with C-q C-c) and are
followed by a number for the foreground and background.(1) Possible
numbers are 0-15, with the first entry being the foreground and the
second the background, separated by a comma. Like this ^C1,6. The
minimum setup is this:
(add-to-list 'erc-modules 'irccontrols)
(setq erc-interpret-controls-p t
erc-interpret-mirc-color t)
As this allows users the chance to make arbitrary combinations, it is
impossible to guarantee a consistently high contrast ratio. All we can
we do is provide guidance on the combinations that satisfy the
accessibility standard of the themes:
Modus Operandi
Use foreground color 1 for all backgrounds from 2-15. Like so:
C-q C-c1 where N is the background.
Modus Vivendi
Use foreground color 0 for all backgrounds from 2-13. Use
foreground 1 for backgrounds 14, 15.
Colors 0 and 1 are white and black respectively. So combine them
together, if you must.
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) This page explains the basics, though it is not specific to
Emacs: <https://www.mirc.com/colors.html>

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on powerline or spaceline, Next: Note on SHR colors, Prev: Note on ERC escaped color sequences, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.13 Note on powerline or spaceline
===================================
Both Powerline and Spaceline package users will likely need to use the
command powerline-reset whenever they make changes to their themes
and/or mode line setup.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on SHR colors, Next: Note on SHR fonts, Prev: Note on powerline or spaceline, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.14 Note on SHR colors
=======================
Emacs HTML rendering library (shr.el) may need explicit configuration
to respect the themes colors instead of whatever specifications the
webpage provides.
Consult the doc string of shr-use-colors.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on SHR fonts, Next: Note on Ement colors and fonts, Prev: Note on SHR colors, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.15 Note on SHR fonts
======================
By default, packages that build on top of the Simple HTML Remember
(shr) use proportionately spaced fonts. This is controlled by the
user option shr-use-fonts, which is set to non-nil by default. To use
the standard font instead, set that variable to nil.
*note Font configurations for Org and others::.
Packages affected by this are:
• elfeed
• ement
• eww
This is a non-exhaustive list.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on Ement colors and fonts, Next: Note on Helm grep, Prev: Note on SHR fonts, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.16 Note on Ement colors and fonts
===================================
The ement.el library by Adam Porter (also known as “alphapapa”)
defaults to a method of colorizing usernames in a rainbow style. This
is controlled by the user option ement-room-prism and can be disabled
with:
(setq ement-room-prism nil)
The contrast ratio of these colors is governed by another user
option: ement-room-prism-minimum-contrast. By default, it is set to 6
which is slightly below our nominal target. Try this instead:
(setq ement-room-prism-minimum-contrast 7)
With regard to fonts, Ement depends on shr (*note Note on SHR
fonts::).
Since we are here, here is an excerpt from Ements source code:
(defcustom ement-room-prism-minimum-contrast 6
"Attempt to enforce this minimum contrast ratio for user faces.
This should be a reasonable number from, e.g. 0-7 or so."
;; Prot would almost approve of this default. :) I would go all the way
;; to 7, but 6 already significantly dilutes the colors in some cases.
:type 'number)
Yes, I do approve of that default. Even a 4.5 (the WCAG AA rating)
would be a good baseline for many themes and/or user configurations.
Our target is the highest of the sort, though we do not demand that
everyone conforms with it.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on Helm grep, Next: Note on vc-annotate-background-mode, Prev: Note on Ement colors and fonts, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.17 Note on Helm grep
======================
There is one face from the Helm package that is meant to highlight the
matches of a grep or grep-like command (ag or ripgrep). It is
helm-grep-match. However, this face can only apply when the user does
not pass --color=always as a command-line option for their command.
Here is the docstring for that face, which is defined in the
helm-grep.el library (you can always visit the source code with M-x
find-library).
Face used to highlight grep matches. Have no effect when grep
backend use “color=”
The user must either remove --color from the flags passed to the
grep function, or explicitly use --color=never (or equivalent). Helm
provides user-facing customization options for controlling the grep
functions parameters, such as helm-grep-default-command and
helm-grep-git-grep-command.
When --color=always is in effect, the grep output will use red text
in bold letter forms to present the matching part in the list of
candidates. That style still meets the contrast ratio target of >= 7:1
(accessibility standard WCAG AAA), because it draws the reference to
ANSI color number 1 (red) from the already-supported array of
ansi-color-names-vector.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on vc-annotate-background-mode, Next: Note on pdf-tools link hints, Prev: Note on Helm grep, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.18 Note on vc-annotate-background-mode
========================================
Due to the unique way vc-annotate (C-x v g) applies colors, support
for its background mode (vc-annotate-background-mode) is disabled at
the theme level.
Normally, such a drastic measure should not belong in a theme:
assuming the users preferences is bad practice. However, it has been
deemed necessary in the interest of preserving color contrast
accessibility while still supporting a useful built-in tool.
If there actually is a way to avoid such a course of action, without
prejudice to the accessibility standard of this project, then please
report as much or send patches (*note Contributing::).

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on pdf-tools link hints, Next: Note on the Notmuch logo, Prev: Note on vc-annotate-background-mode, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.19 Note on pdf-tools link hints
=================================
Hints are drawn by ImageMagick (https://imagemagick.org/), not Emacs,
i.e., ImageMagick doesnt know about the hint face unless you tell
ImageMagick about it. By default, only the foreground and background
color attributes are passed. The below snippet adds to those the
various font attributes. As it queries various faces, specifically
pdf-links-read-link and the faces it inherits, it needs to be added to
your initialization file after youve customized any faces.
(use-package pdf-links
:config
(let ((spec
(apply #'append
(mapcar
(lambda (name)
(list name
(face-attribute 'pdf-links-read-link
name nil 'default)))
'(:family :width :weight :slant)))))
(setq pdf-links-read-link-convert-commands
`("-density" "96"
"-family" ,(plist-get spec :family)
"-stretch" ,(let* ((width (plist-get spec :width))
(name (symbol-name width)))
(replace-regexp-in-string "-" ""
(capitalize name)))
"-weight" ,(pcase (plist-get spec :weight)
('ultra-light "Thin")
('extra-light "ExtraLight")
('light "Light")
('semi-bold "SemiBold")
('bold "Bold")
('extra-bold "ExtraBold")
('ultra-bold "Black")
(_weight "Normal"))
"-style" ,(pcase (plist-get spec :slant)
('italic "Italic")
('oblique "Oblique")
(_slant "Normal"))
"-pointsize" "%P"
"-undercolor" "%f"
"-fill" "%b"
"-draw" "text %X,%Y '%c'"))))

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Note on the Notmuch logo, Prev: Note on pdf-tools link hints, Up: Notes on individual packages
7.20 Note on the Notmuch logo
=============================
By default, the “hello” buffer of Notmuch includes a header with the
programs logo and a couple of buttons. The logo has the effect of
enlarging the height of the line, which negatively impacts the shape of
those buttons. Disabling the logo fixes the problem:
(setq notmuch-show-logo nil)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Frequently Asked Questions, Next: Contributing, Prev: Notes on individual packages, Up: Top
8 Frequently Asked Questions
****************************
In this section we provide answers related to some aspects of the Modus
themes design and application.
* Menu:
* Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?::
* What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?::
* Why are colors mostly variants of blue, magenta, cyan?: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?.
* What is the best setup for legibility?::
* Are these color schemes?::
* Port the Modus themes to other platforms?::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?, Next: What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?, Up: Frequently Asked Questions
8.1 Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?
================================================
The minimum contrast ratio in relative luminance that the themes conform
with always refers to any given combination of background and foreground
colors. If we have some blue colored text next to a magenta one, both
against a white background, we do not mean to imply that blue:magenta is
7:1 in terms of relative luminance. Rather, we state that blue:white
and magenta:white each are 7:1 or higher.
The point of reference is always the background. Because colors have
about the same minimum distance in luminance from their backdrop, they
necessarily are fairly close to each other in this measure. A possible
blue:magenta combination would naturally be around 1:1 in contrast of
the sort here considered.
To differentiate between sequential colors, we rely on hueness by
mapping contrasting hues to adjacent constructs, while avoiding
exaggerations. A blue next to a magenta can be told apart regardless of
their respective contrast ratio against their common background.
Exceptions would be tiny characters in arguably not so realistic cases,
such as two dots drawn side-by-side which for some reason would need to
be colored differently. They would still be legible though, which is
the primary objective of the Modus themes.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?, Next: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?, Prev: Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?, Up: Frequently Asked Questions
8.2 What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?
=============================================
The Modus themes are designed with restraint, so that their default
looks do not overdo it with the application of color.
*note Customization Options::.
This is the non-quantifiable aspect of the themes design: the
artistic part, if you will. There are a lot of cases where color can be
used inconsiderately, without accounting for layout, typographic, or
other properties of the presentation. For example, two headings with
distinct markers, such as leading asterisks in Org buffers, do not have
to have highly contrasting hues between them in order to be told apart:
the added element of contrast in hueness does not contribute
significantly more to the distinction between the headings than colors
whose hues are relatively closer to each other in the color space.
Exaggerations can be hard to anticipate or identify. Multiple shades
of blue and magenta in the same context may not seem optimal: one might
think that it would be better to use highly contrasting hues to ensure
that all colors stand out, such as by placing blue next to yellow, next
to magenta, and green. That would, however, be a case of design for its
own sake; a case where color is being applied without consideration of
its end results in the given context. Too many contrasting hues in
close proximity force an erratic rate to how the eye jumps from one
piece of text to the next. Whereas multiple shades of, say, blue and
magenta can suffice to tell things apart and avoid excess coloration: a
harmonious rhythm.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?, Next: What is the best setup for legibility?, Prev: What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?, Up: Frequently Asked Questions
8.3 Why are colors mostly variants of blue, magenta, cyan?
==========================================================
Due to the innate properties of color, some options are better than
others for the accessibility purposes of the themes, the stylistic
consistency between modus-operandi and modus-vivendi, and the
avoidance of exaggerations in design.
*note What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?::
What we describe as color is a function of three distinct channels of
light: red, green, blue. In hexadecimal RGB notation, a color value is
read as three pairs of red, green, and blue light: #RRGGBB. Of those
three, the most luminant is green, while the least luminant is blue.
The three basic colors represent each of the channels of light. They
can be intermixed to give us six colors: red and green derive yellow,
green and blue make cyan, red and blue turn into magenta.
We can test the luminance of each of those against white and black to
get a sense of how not all colors are equally good for accessibility
(white is #ffffff, which means that all three light channels are fully
luminated, while black is #000000 meaning that no light is present
(notwithstanding display technology)).
| Name | | #ffffff | #000000 |
|---------+---------+---------+---------|
| red | #ff0000 | 4.00 | 5.25 |
| yellow | #ffff00 | 1.07 | 19.56 |
| green | #00ff00 | 1.37 | 15.30 |
| cyan | #00ffff | 1.25 | 16.75 |
| blue | #0000ff | 8.59 | 2.44 |
| magenta | #ff00ff | 3.14 | 6.70 |
*note Measure color contrast::.
By reading this table we learn that every color that has a high level
of green light (green, yellow, cyan) is virtually unreadable against a
white background and, conversely, can be easily read against black.
We can then infer that red and blue, in different combinations, with
green acting as calibrator for luminance, will give us fairly moderate
colors that pass the 7:1 target. Blue with a bit of green produce
appropriate variants of cyan. Similarly, blue combined with some red
and hints of green give us suitable shades of purple.
Due to the need of maintaining some difference in hueness between
adjacent colors, it is not possible to make red, green, and yellow the
main colors, because blue cannot be used to control their luminance and,
thus the relevant space will shrink considerably.
*note Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?::
This phenomenon is best illustrated by the following table that
measures the relative luminance of shades of red, yellow, magenta
against white:
| | #ffffff |
|---------+---------|
| #990000 | 8.92 |
| #995500 | 5.75 |
| #990099 | 7.46 |
We notice that equal values of red and blue light in #990099
(magenta shade) do not lead to a considerable change in luminance
compared with #990000 (red variant). Whereas less amount of green
light in #995500 leads to a major drop in luminance relative to white.
It follows that using the green channel of light to calibrate the
luminance of colors is more effective than trying to do the same with
either red or blue (the latter is the least effective in that regard).
When we need to work with several colors, it is always better to have
sufficient manoeuvring space, especially since we cannot pick arbitrary
colors but only those that satisfy the accessibility objectives of the
themes.
As for why we do not mostly use green, yellow, cyan for the dark
theme, it is because those colors are far more luminant than their
counterparts on the other side of the spectrum, so to ensure that they
all have about the same contrast ratios we would have to alter their
hueness considerably. In short, the effect would not be optimal as it
would lead to exaggerations. Plus, it would make modus-vivendi look
completely different than modus-operandi, to the effect that the two
could not be properly considered part of the same project.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: What is the best setup for legibility?, Next: Are these color schemes?, Prev: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?, Up: Frequently Asked Questions
8.4 What is the best setup for legibility?
==========================================
The Modus themes can be conceptually simplified as combinations of color
values that account for relative luminance and inner harmony. Those
qualities do not guarantee that every end-user will have the same
experience, due to differences between people, but also because of
variances in hardware capabilities and configurations. For the purposes
of this document, we may only provide suggestions pertaining to the
latter case.
modus-operandi is best used outdoors or in a room that either gets
direct sunlight or has plenty of light. Whereas modus-vivendi works
better when there is not a lot of sunshine or the room has a source of
light that is preferably a faint and/or warm one. It is possible to use
modus-operandi at night and modus-vivendi during the day, though
that will depend on several variables, such as ones overall perception
of color, the paint on the walls and how that contributes to the
impression of lightness in the room, the sense of space within the eyes
peripheral vision, hardware specifications, and environmental factors.
In general, an additional source of light other than that of the
monitor can help reduce eye strain: the eyes are more relaxed when they
do not have to focus on one point to gather light.
The monitors display settings must be accounted for. Gamma values,
in particular, need to be calibrated to neither amplify nor distort the
perception of black. Same principle for sharpness, brightness, and
contrast as determined by the hardware, which all have an effect on how
text is read on the screen.
There are software level methods on offer, such as the XrandR utility
for the X Window System (X.org), which can make gamma corrections for
each of the three channels of light (red, green, blue). For example:
xrandr --output LVDS1 --brightness 1.0 --gamma 0.76:0.75:0.68
Typography is another variable. Some font families are blurry at
small point sizes. Others may have a regular weight that is lighter
(thiner) than that of their peers which may, under certain
circumstances, cause a halo effect around each glyph.
The gist is that legibility cannot be fully solved at the theme
level. The color combinations may have been optimized for
accessibility, though the remaining contributing factors in each case
need to be considered in full.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Are these color schemes?, Next: Port the Modus themes to other platforms?, Prev: What is the best setup for legibility?, Up: Frequently Asked Questions
8.5 Are these color schemes?
============================
No, the Modus themes are not color schemes.
A color scheme is a collection of colors. A good color scheme is a
combination of colors with an inner logic or abstract structure.
A theme is a set of patterns that are applied across different
contexts. A good theme is one that does so with consistency, though not
uniformity.
In practical terms, a color scheme is what one uses when, for
example, they edit the first sixteen escape sequences of a terminal
emulator to the hues of their preference. The terminal offers the
option to choose, say, the exact value of what counts as “red”, but does
not provide the means to control where that is mapped to and whether it
should also have other qualities such as a bold weight for the
underlying text or an added background color. In contradistinction,
Emacs uses constructs known as “faces” which allow the user/developer to
specify where a given color will be used and whether it should be
accompanied by other typographic or stylistic attributes.
By configuring the multitude of faces on offer we thus control both
which colors are applied and how they appear in their context. When a
package wants to render each instance of “foo” with the “bar” face, it
is not requesting a specific color, which makes things considerably more
flexible as we can treat “bar” in its own right without necessarily
having to use some color value that we hardcoded somewhere.
Which brings us to the distinction between consistency and uniformity
where our goal is always the former: we want things to look similar
across all interfaces, but we must never force a visual identity where
that runs contrary to the functionality of the given interface. For
instance, all links are underlined by default yet there are cases such
as when viewing listings of emails in Gnus (and Mu4e, Notmuch) where (i)
it is already understood that one must follow the indicator or headline
to view its contents and (ii) underlining everything would make the
interface virtually unusable.
*note Option for links: Link styles.
Again, one must exercise judgement in order to avoid discrimination,
where “discrimination” refers to:
• The treatment of substantially different magnitudes as if they were
of the same class.
• Or the treatment of the same class of magnitudes as if they were of
a different class.
(To treat similar things differently; to treat dissimilar things
alike.)
If, in other words, one was to enforce uniformity without accounting
for the particular requirements of each case—the contextual demands for
usability beyond matters of color—they would be making a not-so-obvious
error of treating different cases as if they were the same.
The Modus themes prioritise “thematic consistency” over abstract
harmony or regularity among their applicable colors. In concrete terms,
we do not claim that, say, our yellows are the best complements for our
blues because we generally avoid using complementary colors
side-by-side, so it is wrong to optimise for a decontextualised
blue+yellow combination. Not to imply that our colors do not work well
together because they do, just to clarify that consistency of context is
what themes must strive for, and that requires widening the scope of the
design beyond the particularities of a color scheme.
Long story short: color schemes and themes have different
requirements. Please do not conflate the two.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Port the Modus themes to other platforms?, Prev: Are these color schemes?, Up: Frequently Asked Questions
8.6 Port the Modus themes to other platforms?
=============================================
There is no plan to port the themes to other platforms or text editors.
I (Protesilaos) only use GNU Emacs and thus cannot maintain code that
targets software I am either not familiar with or am not using on a
daily basis.
While it is possible to produce a simulacrum based on a given
template, doing so would run contrary to how this project is maintained
where details matter greatly.
Each program has its own requirements so it wont always be
possible—or indeed desirable—to have 1:1 correspondence between what
applies to Emacs and what should be done elsewhere. No port should ever
strive to be a faithful copy of the Emacs implementation, as no other
program is an Emacs equivalent, but instead try to follow the spirit of
the design. For example, some of the customization options accept a
list as their value, or an alist, which may not be possible to reproduce
on other platforms.
*note Customization options: Customization Options.
In other words, if something must be done differently on a certain
editor then that is acceptable so long as (i) the accessibility
standards are not compromised and (ii) the overall character of the
themes remains consistent.
The former criterion should be crystal clear as it pertains to the
scientific foundations of the themes: high legibility and taking care of
the needs of users with red-green color deficiency (deuteranopia) by
avoiding red+green color coding paradigms and/or by providing red+blue
variants.
The latter criterion is the “je ne sais quoi” of the artistic aspect
of the themes, which is partially fleshed out in this manual.
*note Frequently Asked Questions::.
With regard to the artistic aspect (where “art” qua skill may amount
to an imprecise science), there is no hard-and-fast rule in effect as it
requires one to exercise discretion and make decisions based on
context-dependent information or constraints. As is true with most
things in life, when in doubt, do not cling on to the letter of the law
but try to understand its spirit.
For a trivial example: the curly underline that Emacs draws for
spelling errors is thinner than, e.g., what a graphical web browser has,
so if I was to design for an editor than has a thicker curly underline I
would make the applicable colors less intense to counterbalance the
typographic intensity of the added thickness.
With those granted, if anyone is willing to develop a port of the
themes, they are welcome to contact me and I will do my best to help
them in their efforts.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Contributing, Next: Acknowledgements, Prev: Frequently Asked Questions, Up: Top
9 Contributing
**************
This section documents the canonical sources of the themes and the ways
in which you can contribute to their ongoing development.
* Menu:
* Sources of the themes::
* Issues you can help with::
* Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Sources of the themes, Next: Issues you can help with, Up: Contributing
9.1 Sources of the themes
=========================
The modus-operandi and modus-vivendi themes are built into Emacs 28.
The source code of the themes is available on SourceHut
(https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/modus-themes). Or check the GitLab
mirror (former main source)
(https://gitlab.com/protesilaos/modus-themes/) and the GitHub mirror
(https://github.com/protesilaos/modus-themes/).
An HTML version of this manual is provided as an extension of the
authors personal website (https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes/)
(does not rely on any non-free code).

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Issues you can help with, Next: Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF, Prev: Sources of the themes, Up: Contributing
9.2 Issues you can help with
============================
A few tasks you can help with by sending an email to the general
modus-themes public mailing list
(https://lists.sr.ht/~protesilaos/modus-themes) (or use the command
modus-themes-report-bug [part of 2.4.0-dev]).
• Suggest refinements to packages that are covered.
• Report packages not covered thus far.
• Report bugs, inconsistencies, shortcomings.
• Help expand the documentation of covered-but-not-styled packages.
• Suggest refinements to the color palette.
• Help expand this document or any other piece of documentation.
• Send patches for code refinements (if you need, ask me for help
with Git—we all start out as beginners).
*note Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF::.
It is preferable that your feedback includes some screenshots, GIFs,
or short videos, as well as further instructions to reproduce a given
setup. Though this is not a requirement.
Also consider mentioning the version of the themes you are using,
such as by invoking the command modus-themes-version [part of
2.4.0-dev].
Whatever you do, bear in mind the overarching objective of the Modus
themes: to keep a contrast ratio that is greater or equal to 7:1 between
background and foreground colors. If a compromise is ever necessary
between aesthetics and accessibility, it shall always be made in the
interest of the latter.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF, Prev: Issues you can help with, Up: Contributing
9.3 Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF
===================================================
Code contributions are most welcome. For any major edit (more than 15
lines, or so, in aggregate per person), you need to make a copyright
assignment to the Free Software Foundation. This is necessary because
the themes are part of the upstream Emacs distribution: the FSF must at
all times be in a position to enforce the GNU General Public License.
Copyright assignment is a simple process. Check the request form
below (please adapt it accordingly). You must write an email to the
address mentioned in the form and then wait for the FSF to send you a
legal agreement. Sign the document and file it back to them. This
could all happen via email and take about a week. You are encouraged to
go through this process. You only need to do it once. It will allow
you to make contributions to Emacs in general.
Please email the following information to assign@gnu.org, and we
will send you the assignment form for your past and future changes.
Please use your full legal name (in ASCII characters) as the subject
line of the message.
REQUEST: SEND FORM FOR PAST AND FUTURE CHANGES
[What is the name of the program or package you're contributing to?]
GNU Emacs
[Did you copy any files or text written by someone else in these changes?
Even if that material is free software, we need to know about it.]
Copied a few snippets from the same files I edited. Their author,
Protesilaos Stavrou, has already assigned copyright to the Free Software
Foundation.
[Do you have an employer who might have a basis to claim to own
your changes? Do you attend a school which might make such a claim?]
[For the copyright registration, what country are you a citizen of?]
[What year were you born?]
[Please write your email address here.]
[Please write your postal address here.]
[Which files have you changed so far, and which new files have you written
so far?]

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Acknowledgements, Next: Other notes about the project, Prev: Contributing, Up: Top
10 Acknowledgements
*******************
The Modus themes are a collective effort. Every bit of work matters.
Author/maintainer
Protesilaos Stavrou.
Contributions to code or documentation
Alex Griffin, Anders Johansson, Basil L. Contovounesios, Björn
Lindström, Carlo Zancanaro, Christian Tietze, Daniel Mendler, Eli
Zaretskii, Fritz Grabo, Illia Ostapyshyn, Kévin Le Gouguec,
Kostadin Ninev, Madhavan Krishnan, Markus Beppler, Matthew
Stevenson, Mauro Aranda, Nicolas De Jaeghere, Philip Kaludercic,
Pierre Téchoueyres, Rudolf Adamkovič, Stephen Gildea, Shreyas
Ragavan, Stefan Kangas, Utkarsh Singh, Vincent Murphy, Xinglu Chen,
Yuanchen Xie.
Ideas and user feedback
Aaron Jensen, Adam Porter, Adam Spiers, Adrian Manea, Alex Griffin,
Alex Koen, Alex Peitsinis, Alexey Shmalko, Alok Singh, Anders
Johansson, André Alexandre Gomes, Antonio Hernández Blas, Arif
Rezai, Augusto Stoffel, Basil L. Contovounesios, Burgess Chang,
Christian Tietze, Christopher Dimech, Christopher League, Damien
Cassou, Daniel Mendler, Dario Gjorgjevski, David Edmondson, Davor
Rotim, Divan Santana, Eliraz Kedmi, Emanuele Michele Alberto
Monterosso, Farasha Euker, Feng Shu, Gautier Ponsinet, Gerry
Agbobada, Gianluca Recchia, Guilherme Semente, Gustavo Barros,
Hörmetjan Yiltiz, Ilja Kocken, Iris Garcia, Jeremy Friesen, Jerry
Zhang, Johannes Grødem, John Haman, Jorge Morais, Joshua OConnor,
Julio C. Villasante, Kenta Usami, Kevin Fleming, Kévin Le Gouguec,
Kostadin Ninev, Len Trigg, Lennart C. Karssen, Magne Hov, Manuel
Uberti, Mark Bestley, Mark Burton, Markus Beppler, Mauro Aranda,
Michael Goldenberg, Morgan Smith, Morgan Willcock, Murilo Pereira,
Nicky van Foreest, Nicolas De Jaeghere, Paul Poloskov, Pengji
Zhang, Pete Kazmier, Peter Wu, Philip Kaludercic, Pierre
Téchoueyres, Przemysław Kryger, Robert Hepple, Roman Rudakov, Ryan
Phillips, Rytis Paškauskas, Rudolf Adamkovič, Sam Kleinman, Samuel
Culpepper, Saša Janiška, Shreyas Ragavan, Simon Pugnet, Tassilo
Horn, Thibaut Verron, Thomas Heartman, Togan Muftuoglu, Tony
Zorman, Trey Merkley, Tomasz Hołubowicz, Toon Claes, Uri Sharf,
Utkarsh Singh, Vincent Foley. As well as users: Ben,
CsBigDataHub1, Emacs Contrib, Eugene, Fourchaux, Fredrik, Moesasji,
Nick, TheBlob42, Trey, bepolymathe, bit9tream, derek-upham, doolio,
fleimgruber, gitrj95, iSeeU, jixiuf, okamsn, pRot0ta1p.
Packaging
Basil L. Contovounesios, Eli Zaretskii, Glenn Morris, Mauro Aranda,
Richard Stallman, Stefan Kangas (core Emacs), Stefan Monnier (GNU
Elpa), André Alexandre Gomes, Dimakakos Dimos, Morgan Smith,
Nicolas Goaziou (Guix), Dhavan Vaidya (Debian).
Inspiration for certain features
Bozhidar Batsov (zenburn-theme), Fabrice Niessen (leuven-theme).
Special thanks (from A-Z) to Gustavo Barros, Manuel Uberti, Nicolas
De Jaeghere, and Omar Antolín Camarena for their long time contributions
and insightful commentary on key aspects of the themes design and/or
aspects of their functionality.

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Other notes about the project, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Acknowledgements, Up: Top
11 Other notes about the project
********************************
If you are curious about the principles that govern the development of
this project read the essay On the design of the Modus themes
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-03-17-design-modus-themes-emacs/)
(2020-03-17).
Here are some more publications for those interested in the kind of
work that goes into this project (sometimes the commits also include
details of this sort):
• Modus Operandi theme subtle palette review
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-05-10-modus-operandi-palette-review/)
(2020-05-10)
• Modus Vivendi theme subtle palette review
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-06-13-modus-vivendi-palette-review/)
(2020-06-13)
• Modus themes: new “faint syntax” option
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-07-04-modus-themes-faint-colours/)
(2020-07-04)
• Modus themes: major review of “nuanced” colours
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-07-08-modus-themes-nuanced-colours/)
(2020-07-08)
• Modus themes: review of blue colours
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-09-14-modus-themes-review-blues/)
(2020-09-14)
• Modus themes: review rainbow-delimiters faces
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2020-12-27-modus-themes-review-rainbow-delimiters/)
(2020-12-27)
• Modus themes: review of select “faint” colours
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2021-01-11-modus-themes-review-select-faint-colours/)
(2021-01-11)
• The Modus themes now cover deuteranopia in diffs
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2021-02-25-modus-themes-diffs-deuteranopia/)
(2021-02-25)
• Introducing the variable modus-themes-org-agenda
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2021-06-02-modus-themes-org-agenda/)
(2021-06-02)
• Modus themes: review of the org-habit graph colours
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2022-01-02-review-modus-themes-org-habit-colours/)
(2022-01-02)
• Re: VSCode or Vim ports of the Emacs modus-themes?
(https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2022-01-03-modus-themes-port-faq/)
(2022-01-03)
And here are the canonical sources of this projects documentation:
Manual
<https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes>
Change Log
<https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes-changelog>
Screenshots
<https://protesilaos.com/emacs/modus-themes-pictures>
Git repository
<https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/modus-themes>
Mailing list
<https://lists.sr.ht/~protesilaos/modus-themes>

File: modus-themes.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Next: Indices, Prev: Other notes about the project, Up: Top
Appendix A GNU Free Documentation License
*****************************************
Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
<https://fsf.org/>
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
0. PREAMBLE
The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
functional and useful document “free” in the sense of freedom: to
assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it,
with or without modifying it, either commercially or
noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the
author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not
being considered responsible for modifications made by others.
This License is a kind of “copyleft”, which means that derivative
works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense.
It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
license designed for free software.
We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for
free software, because free software needs free documentation: a
free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms
that the software does. But this License is not limited to
software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless
of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We
recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is
instruction or reference.
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A “Modified Version” of the Document means any work containing the
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File: modus-themes.info, Node: Indices, Prev: GNU Free Documentation License, Up: Top
B Indices
*********
* Menu:
* Function index::
* Variable index::
* Concept index::

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Function index, Next: Variable index, Up: Indices
B.1 Function index
==================
[index]
* Menu:
* modus-themes-color: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-color-alts: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-contrast: Measure color contrast.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-list-colors: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-list-colors-current: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-load-operandi: Enable and load. (line 6)
* modus-themes-load-themes: Enable and load. (line 6)
* modus-themes-load-vivendi: Enable and load. (line 6)
* modus-themes-report-bug: Issues you can help with.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-toggle: Enable and load. (line 6)
* modus-themes-version: Issues you can help with.
(line 26)
* modus-themes-wcag-formula: Measure color contrast.
(line 6)
* modus-themes-with-colors: Face specs at scale using the themes' palette.
(line 6)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Variable index, Next: Concept index, Prev: Function index, Up: Indices
B.2 Variable index
==================
[index]
* Menu:
* modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook: Enable and load. (line 6)
* modus-themes-bold-constructs: Bold constructs. (line 6)
* modus-themes-box-buttons: Box buttons. (line 6)
* modus-themes-completions: Completion UIs. (line 6)
* modus-themes-deuteranopia: Deuteranopia style. (line 6)
* modus-themes-diffs: Diffs. (line 6)
* modus-themes-fringes: Fringes. (line 6)
* modus-themes-headings: Heading styles. (line 6)
* modus-themes-hl-line: Line highlighting. (line 6)
* modus-themes-inhibit-reload: Custom reload theme. (line 6)
* modus-themes-intense-mouseovers: Mouse hover effects. (line 6)
* modus-themes-italic-constructs: Italic constructs. (line 6)
* modus-themes-lang-checkers: Language checkers. (line 6)
* modus-themes-links: Link styles. (line 6)
* modus-themes-mail-citations: Mail citations. (line 6)
* modus-themes-markup: Markup. (line 6)
* modus-themes-mixed-fonts: Mixed fonts. (line 6)
* modus-themes-mode-line: Mode line. (line 6)
* modus-themes-operandi-color-overrides: Override colors. (line 6)
* modus-themes-org-agenda: Org agenda. (line 6)
* modus-themes-org-blocks: Org mode blocks. (line 6)
* modus-themes-paren-match: Matching parentheses. (line 6)
* modus-themes-prompts: Command prompts. (line 6)
* modus-themes-region: Active region. (line 6)
* modus-themes-subtle-line-numbers: Line numbers. (line 6)
* modus-themes-syntax: Syntax styles. (line 6)
* modus-themes-tabs-accented: Tab style. (line 6)
* modus-themes-variable-pitch-ui: UI typeface. (line 6)
* modus-themes-vivendi-color-overrides: Override colors. (line 6)

File: modus-themes.info, Node: Concept index, Prev: Variable index, Up: Indices
B.3 Concept index
=================
[index]
* Menu:
* Avoiding exaggerations in design: What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?.
(line 6)
* Bold and italic fonts: Configure bold and italic faces.
(line 6)
* Change a themes color saturation: Override color saturation.
(line 6)
* Change a themes colors: Override colors. (line 6)
* Change theme colors through blending: Override colors through blending.
(line 6)
* Changelog: Learn about the latest changes.
(line 6)
* Color accuracy of terminal emulators: More accurate colors in terminal emulators.
(line 6)
* Color contrast: Measure color contrast.
(line 6)
* Contrast between adjacent colors: Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?.
(line 6)
* Contributing: Issues you can help with.
(line 6)
* Contributors: Acknowledgements. (line 6)
* Cycle colors: Cycle through arbitrary colors.
(line 6)
* Decrease mode line height: Decrease mode line height.
(line 6)
* Development notes: Other notes about the project.
(line 6)
* Essential configuration: Enable and load. (line 6)
* Explicitly supported packages: Supported packages. (line 6)
* Extracting colors en masse: Face specs at scale using the themes' palette.
(line 6)
* Extracting individual colors: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette.
(line 6)
* Font configurations: Font configurations for Org and others.
(line 6)
* Fonts in EWW, Elfeed, Ement, and SHR: Note on SHR fonts. (line 6)
* Foreground-only diffs: Diffs with only the foreground.
(line 6)
* Frequently Asked Questions: Frequently Asked Questions.
(line 6)
* General setup for readability: What is the best setup for legibility?.
(line 6)
* Implicitly supported packages: Indirectly covered packages.
(line 6)
* Innate color qualities of the palette: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?.
(line 6)
* load-theme VS enable-theme: Differences between loading and enabling.
(line 6)
* Monochrome code syntax: Near-monochrome syntax highlighting.
(line 6)
* Org custom emphasis faces: Custom Org emphasis faces.
(line 6)
* Org custom todo faces: Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces.
(line 6)
* Porting the themes to other editors: Port the Modus themes to other platforms?.
(line 6)
* Preview color values: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette.
(line 6)
* Pure white and pure black in terminal emulators: Range of color with terminal emulators.
(line 6)
* Remapping faces: Remap face with local value.
(line 6)
* Remapping pdf-tools backdrop: Backdrop for pdf-tools.
(line 6)
* sample configuration: Sample configuration with and without use-package.
(line 6)
* Screenshots: How do the themes look like.
(line 6)
* Sources of the themes: Sources of the themes. (line 6)
* Switch themes without load-theme: Toggle themes without reloading them.
(line 6)
* Themes, not color schemes: Are these color schemes?.
(line 6)
* use-package configuration: Sample configuration with and without use-package.
(line 6)

Tag Table:
Node: Top872
Node: Overview7614
Node: How do the themes look like9738
Node: Learn about the latest changes10252
Node: Installation10640
Node: Install manually from source11121
Node: Install from the archives11946
Node: Install on GNU/Linux12723
Node: Debian 11 Bullseye13171
Node: GNU Guix13481
Node: Enable and load13764
Node: Sample configuration with and without use-package17303
Node: Differences between loading and enabling20207
Node: Customization Options22216
Node: Custom reload theme30596
Node: Deuteranopia style31386
Node: Bold constructs32817
Node: Italic constructs33651
Node: Syntax styles34418
Node: Mixed fonts36550
Node: Link styles37814
Node: Box buttons40288
Node: Command prompts43585
Node: Mode line45406
Node: Tab style50901
Node: Completion UIs51564
Node: Mail citations55418
Node: Fringes56564
Node: Language checkers57304
Node: Line highlighting59746
Node: Line numbers61343
Node: Mouse hover effects62424
Node: Markup63039
Node: Matching parentheses64639
Node: Active region66016
Node: Diffs67429
Node: Org mode blocks69080
Node: Org agenda71470
Node: Heading styles80286
Node: UI typeface85053
Node: Advanced customization85952
Node: More accurate colors in terminal emulators87623
Node: Range of color with terminal emulators88864
Node: Visualize the active Modus theme's palette91569
Node: Per-theme customization settings92565
Node: Case-by-case face specs using the themes' palette93921
Node: Face specs at scale using the themes' palette98469
Node: Remap face with local value103270
Node: Cycle through arbitrary colors105695
Node: Override colors112123
Node: Override color saturation117361
Node: Override colors through blending123042
Node: Font configurations for Org and others125899
Ref: Font configurations for Org and others-Footnote-1128715
Node: Configure bold and italic faces128902
Node: Custom Org todo keyword and priority faces133050
Node: Custom Org emphasis faces136723
Node: Update Org block delimiter fontification141524
Node: Measure color contrast143441
Node: Load theme depending on time of day146164
Node: Backdrop for pdf-tools147157
Node: Decrease mode line height150009
Node: Toggle themes without reloading them154131
Node: A theme-agnostic hook for theme loading155410
Node: Diffs with only the foreground157812
Node: Ediff without diff color-coding160926
Node: Near-monochrome syntax highlighting163065
Node: Face coverage172032
Node: Supported packages172484
Node: Indirectly covered packages179131
Node: Notes on individual packages180203
Node: Note on avy hints181296
Node: Note on calendarel weekday and weekend colors182464
Node: Note on underlines in compilation buffers183647
Node: Note on inline Latex in Org buffers184494
Node: Note on dimmerel185104
Node: Note on display-fill-column-indicator-mode186589
Node: Note on highlight-parenthesesel187987
Node: Note on mmm-modeel background colors193976
Node: Note for prism196291
Node: Note for god-mode199445
Node: Note on company-mode overlay pop-up201049
Ref: Note on company-mode overlay pop-up-Footnote-1201739
Ref: Note on company-mode overlay pop-up-Footnote-2201806
Node: Note on ERC escaped color sequences201861
Ref: Note on ERC escaped color sequences-Footnote-1203289
Node: Note on powerline or spaceline203399
Node: Note on SHR colors203813
Node: Note on SHR fonts204237
Node: Note on Ement colors and fonts204870
Node: Note on Helm grep206369
Node: Note on vc-annotate-background-mode207846
Node: Note on pdf-tools link hints208731
Node: Note on the Notmuch logo211196
Node: Frequently Asked Questions211694
Node: Is the contrast ratio about adjacent colors?212325
Node: What does it mean to avoid exaggerations?213832
Node: Why are colors mostly variants of blue magenta cyan?215661
Node: What is the best setup for legibility?219967
Node: Are these color schemes?222612
Node: Port the Modus themes to other platforms?226332
Node: Contributing229113
Node: Sources of the themes229510
Node: Issues you can help with230209
Node: Patches require copyright assignment to the FSF231821
Node: Acknowledgements234041
Node: Other notes about the project237319
Node: GNU Free Documentation License240005
Node: Indices265382
Node: Function index265561
Node: Variable index267364
Node: Concept index269651

End Tag Table

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