mirror of
https://github.com/ItsDrike/dotfiles.git
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669 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
669 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
# Theming
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This guide will go over setting up Qt and GTK themes on Arch Linux.
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My preferred setup uses:
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- [BreezeX-RosePine-Linux](https://github.com/rose-pine/cursor) cursor theme,
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size 24.
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- [Papirus-Dark](https://github.com/catppuccin/papirus-folders) icon theme from
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catppuccin papirus folders, specifically the blue accent & mocha flavor
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variant.
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- The default font of my choice is [Noto
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Sans](https://fonts.google.com/noto/specimen/Noto+Sans), size 10
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- The default monospace font of my choice is [Monaspace
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Krypton](https://monaspace.githubnext.com/)
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- For GTK theme, I'm using
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[Tokyonight-Dark](https://github.com/Fausto-Korpsvart/Tokyonight-GTK-Theme).
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- For QT theme, I'm using
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[Catppuccin-Mocha-Blue](https://github.com/catppuccin/Kvantum) kvantum theme.
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> [!NOTE]
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> My dotfiles already include most of the necessary theme configuration files,
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> so if you're using them, you can skip a lot of the steps I mention here. This
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> guide assumes a completely un-themed system, to make it easy for anyone to
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> follow.
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>
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> If there is something that you're expected to do even if you've copied over
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> all of the configuration files from my dotfiles repo, it will be explicitly
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> mentioned in an _important_ markdown block.
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## Packages
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First, we'll install all the required packages:
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```bash
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paru -S --needed \
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rose-pine-cursor \
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papirus-folders-catppuccin-git \
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noto-fonts otf-monaspace \
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tokyonight-gtk-theme-git \
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kvantum kvantum-qt5 qt5ct qt6ct kvantum-theme-catppuccin-git
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```
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## Dconf / Gsettings
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Dconf is a low-level configuration system that works through D-Bus, serving as
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backend to GSettings. It's a simple key-based config systems, with the keys
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existing in an unstructured database.
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You can use the `dconf` command manually to set specific keys to given values,
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but it's often more a better idea to use `gsettings`, which provide some
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abstractions and does consistency checking, but ultimately it will just store
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the configured values into the `dconf` database.
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Dconf is used by a lot of applications for various things, but a lot of the
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dconf settings are related to theming and it's crucial that we set them, as some
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applications will follow these instead of the configuration files.
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> [!IMPORTANT]
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> You will need to perform this step even if you're using my dotfiles. The
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> dconf database is not a part of my dotfiles, so these values won't be set.
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```bash
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# Global configuration that tells applications to prefer dark mode
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface color-scheme prefer-dark
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# GTK theme
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface gtk-theme Tokyonight-Dark
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# Font settings
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name 'Noto Sans 10'
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name 'Noto Sans 10'
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name 'Source Code Pro 10'
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# Cursor settings
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface cursor-theme 'BreezeX-RosePine-Linux'
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gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface cursor-size 24
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```
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> [!TIP]
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> You can find all registered dconf schemas with `gsettings list-schemas`. To
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> include the keys, you can `gsettings list-recursively`.
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>
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> You might want to set some of these according to your preferences.
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## XSettings
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Similarly to dconf/gsettings specification, there's also an XSETTINGS
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specification, that is used by some Xorg applications (most notably GTK, Java
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and Wine based apps). It is less useful on Wayland, but since a lot of
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applications still don't have native wayland support, it may be worth setting
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up anyways. XWayland applications may still depend on this.
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Applications that rely on this specification will ask for the settings from the
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Xorg server, which itself gets them from a daemon service. On GNOME desktop,
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this would be `gnome-settings-daemon`, but anywhere else, you'll want to use
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[`xsettingsd`](https://codeberg.org/derat/xsettingsd), which is a lightweight
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alternative.
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<!-- markdownlint-disable MD028 -->
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> [!NOTE]
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> This part of the guide is optional, you don't have to set up xsettings, most
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> applications will work just fine without it.
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> [!IMPORTANT]
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> If you do wish to set up xsettings, you will need to follow these
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> instructions, even if you've populated your system with the configuration
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> files from my dotifiles, as it requires installing a package and activating a
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> systemd service.
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<!-- markdownlint-enable MD028 -->
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First, you will want to install `xsettingd` package and activate the systemd
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service, so that applications can ask for this daemon a specific setting:
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```bash
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pacman -S xsettingsd
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systemctl --user enable --now xsettingsd
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```
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These settings can control various things, but for us, we'll focus on the
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theming. XSettings are configured simply through a config file in:
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`~/.config/xsettingsd/xsettingsd.conf`.
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To configure theming in xsettings, you can put the following settings into your
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`xsettingsd.conf` file:
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```conf
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Net/ThemeName "Tokyonight-Dark"
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Net/IconThemeName "Papirus-Dark"
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Gtk/CursorThemeName "BreezeX-RosePine-Linux"
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Net/EnableEventSounds 1
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EnableInputFeedbackSounds 0
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Xft/Antialias 1
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Xft/Hinting 1
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Xft/HintStyle "hintslight"
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Xft/RGBA "rgb"
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```
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## GTK
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> [!TIP]
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> We'll be setting things up manually, however, if you wish, you can also use
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> [`nwg-look`](https://github.com/nwg-piotr/nwg-look) to configure GTK from a
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> graphical settings application. Do note though that by default, it doesn't
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> support GTK 4 theming (see: [this github
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> issue](https://github.com/nwg-piotr/nwg-look/issues/22)).
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>
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> `nwg-look` is inspired by the more popular `lxappearance`, however, it is
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> made for native wayland. That said, either will work, so you can also try
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> `lxappearance` if you wish, even on wayland.
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### GTK 2
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For GTK 2, we'll first want to change the location of the `gtkrc` configuration
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file, to follow proper XDG base directory specification and avoid it cluttering
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`$HOME`. To do this, we'll need to set the following environment variable to be
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exported by your shell:
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```bash
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export GTK2_RC_FILES="$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gtk-2.0/gtkrc":"$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gtk-2.0/gtkrc.mine"
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```
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We'll now create `~/.config/gtk-2.0` directory, and a `gtkrc` file inside of it,
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with the following content:
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```text
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gtk-theme-name = "Tokyonight-Dark"
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gtk-icon-theme-name = "Papirus-Dark"
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gtk-cursor-theme-name = "BreezeX-RosePine-Linux"
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gtk-cursor-theme-size = 24
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gtk-font-name = "Noto Sans 10"
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gtk-button-images=1
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gtk-menu-images=1
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gtk-enable-event-sounds=0
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gtk-enable-input-feedback-sounds=0
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gtk-toolbar-icon-size=GTK_ICON_SIZE_LARGE_TOOLBAR
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gtk-toolbar-style=GTK_TOOLBAR_BOTH_HORIZ
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gtk-xft-antialias=1
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gtk-xft-hinting=1
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gtk-xft-hintstyle="hintslight"
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gtk-xft-rgba="rgb"
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```
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### GTK 3
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For GTK 3, we'll put the following into `~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini`:
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```conf
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[Settings]
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gtk-application-prefer-dark-theme=true
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gtk-theme-name=Tokyonight-Dark
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gtk-icon-theme-name=Papirus-Dark
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gtk-cursor-theme-name=BreezeX-RosePine-Linux
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gtk-cursor-theme-size=24
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gtk-font-name=Noto Sans 10
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gtk-enable-animations=true
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gtk-button-images=1
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gtk-menu-images=1
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gtk-enable-event-sounds=0
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gtk-enable-input-feedback-sounds=0
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gtk-error-bell=0
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gtk-decoration-layout=appmenu:none
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gtk-toolbar-icon-size=GTK_ICON_SIZE_LARGE_TOOLBAR
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gtk-toolbar-style=GTK_TOOLBAR_BOTH_HORIZ
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gtk-xft-antialias=1
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gtk-xft-hinting=1
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gtk-xft-hintstyle=hintslight
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```
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### GTK 4
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For GTK 4, we'll put the following into `~/.config/gtk-4.0/settings.ini`:
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```conf
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[Settings]
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gtk-application-prefer-dark-theme=true
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gtk-theme-name=Tokyonight-Dark
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gtk-icon-theme-name=Papirus-Dark
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gtk-cursor-theme-name=BreezeX-RosePine-Linux
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gtk-cursor-theme-size=24
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gtk-font-name=Noto Sans 10
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gtk-enable-event-sounds=0
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gtk-enable-input-feedback-sounds=0
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gtk-error-bell=0
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gtk-decoration-layout=appmenu:none
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gtk-xft-antialias=1
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gtk-xft-hinting=1
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gtk-xft-hintstyle=hintslight
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```
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For `libadwaita` based GTK 4 applications, you will need to force a GTK theme
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with an environment variable, so you will also want to export the following:
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```bash
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export GTK_THEME="Tokyonight-Dark"
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```
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<!-- markdownlint-disable MD028 -->
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> [!WARNING]
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> This will only work if your theme has GTK 4 support.
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> [!TIP]
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> As an alternative to exporting the `GTK_THEME` env var like this, you can
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> also install `libadwaita-without-adwaita-git` AUR package, which contains a
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> patch to prevent GTK from overriding the system theme.
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>
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> Another option would be to import the theme in `gtk.css`: `~/.config/gtk-4.0/gtk.css`:
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>
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> ```css
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> /**
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> * GTK 4 reads the theme configured by gtk-theme-name, but ignores it.
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> * It does however respect user CSS, so import the theme from here.
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> **/
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> @import url("file:///usr/share/themes/Tokyonight-Dark/gtk-4.0/gtk.css");
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> ```
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<!-- markdownlint-enable MD028 -->
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### Make GTK follow XDG portal settings
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Certain things, such as dialogs or file-pickers can be controlled via XDG
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desktop portals, however, by default, GTK apps will not follow these settings.
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To force them into doing so, you can export an environment variable:
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```bash
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export GTK_USE_PORTAL=1
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```
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## Qt
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This section goes over configuring QT styles for qt 5 and qt 6.
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### Kvantum
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I like using `kvantum` to configure QT themes. Kvantum is an SVG style
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customizer/engine, for which there's a bunch of plugins. It then turns these
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plugins / kvantum themes into full QT themes. For theme creators, it simplifies
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making a full QT theme.
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> [!NOTE]
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> Kvantum will only be useful for you if you actually want to use a kvantum
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> theme. If you wish to use a full QT theme that doesn't need kvantum, you can
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> skip this and instead achieve the same with qtct. (I'll say a bit more about
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> qtct in icon theme section.)
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Kvantum works as a Qt style instead of a Qt platform theme. To set kvantum for
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all Qt applications, you can export the following env variable:
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```bash
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export QT_STYLE_OVERRIDE=kvantum
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```
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> [!NOTE]
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> For backwards compatibility, in addition to the `kvantum` package, you will
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> also need `kvantum-qt5` (`kvantum` works with qt6). If you followed the
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> initial install instructions, you will have both installed already.
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### Theme
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We will now want to tell kvantum which theme to use. To do this, we will need to
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create a settings file for Kvantum in `~/.config/Kvantum/kvantum.kvconfig`, with
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the following content:
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```conf
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[General]
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theme=catppuccin-mocha-blue
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```
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> [!TIP]
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> The system-wide kvantum themes are located in `/usr/share/Kvantum`. The theme
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> variable has to match the directory name of one of these themes.
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>
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> If you wish to use a custom theme that isn't available as a package, you can
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> also add it as a user theme directly into `~/.config/Kvantum/`.
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### Icon theme & qtct
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As a theme qt engine, kvantum can't handle icons. For those, we will use qtct
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platform theme.
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> [!NOTE]
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> You will need to install `qt5ct` & `qt6ct` packages. These will also be
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> installed already if you followed the initial install command though.
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Now we'll set the QT platform theme through an environment variable:
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```bash
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export QT_QPA_PLATFORMTHEME="qt5ct" # keep this value even for qt6ct
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```
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Finally, we can add a qtct configuration to use our preferred icon theme:
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`~/.config/qt5ct/qt5ct.conf`:
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```conf
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[Appearance]
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icon_theme=Papirus-Dark
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```
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Same thing for `~/.config/qt6ct/qt6ct.conf`.
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> [!NOTE]
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> qtct is a platform theme and it can do a lot more than just set the icon
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> theme, however, we chose kvantum to serve as our style, so we don't need
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> anything else from qtct.
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>
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> If you wish to instead use qtct for picking the qt style, unset the
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> `QT_STYLE_OVERRIDE` variable and pick your theme in both `qt5ct` & `qt6ct`
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> applications. This will modify the `qt5ct.conf` and the qt 6 variant.
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### Additional things
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There are some extra things that you'll probably want to set. To do so, we will
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yet again use more environment variables. Specifically:
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```bash
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# Enables automatic scaling, based on the monitor's pixel density.
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export QT_AUTO_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTOR="1"
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# Run QT applications using the wayland plugin, falling back to xcb (X11) plugin
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export QT_QPA_PLATFORM="wayland;xcb"
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# Disable client side decorations
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export QT_WAYLAND_DISABLE_WINDOWDECORATION="1"
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```
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## Cursor
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### XCursor
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XCursor is the default cursor format for cursor themes. Even though the name
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might imply that it's connected to X11, it will work just fine on wayland too.
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To select a cursor theme to be used, you'll want to export the following
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environment variables:
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```bash
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export XCURSOR_THEME="BreezeX-RosePine-Linux"
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export XCURSOR_SIZE="24"
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```
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Additionally, you might want to also modify/set `XCURSOR_PATH`, to make sure
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that it includes `~/.local/share/icons`, as otherwise, xcursor will not look
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here for cursor themes by default on some DEs/WMs.
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```bash
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export XCURSOR_PATH=$XCURSOR_PATH${XCURSOR_PATH:+:}~/.local/share/icons
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```
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### Default cursor config
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The cursor theme name "default" is used by an application if it cannot pick up
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on a configuration. The default cursor theme can live in:
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`~/.local/share/icons/default` or `/usr/share/icons/default`.
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To set the default cursor for your user, create a
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`~/.local/share/icons/default/index.theme` file with the following:
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```conf
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[Icon Theme]
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Name=Default
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Comment=Default Cursor Theme
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Inherits=BreezeX-RosePine-Linux
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```
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> [!TIP]
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> Alternatively, we could also symlink the cursor theme into the `default`
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> directory, like so:
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>
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> ```bash
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> ln -s /usr/share/icons/BreezeX-RosePine-Linux/ ~/.local/share/icons/default
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> ```
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>
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> That said, I prefer using `Inherits` here, as it allows me to easily store the
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> default cursor config in my dotfiles.
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### Cursor config for GTK
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You may have noticed earlier that we've already touched on specifying the cursor
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configuration for GTK in the gtkrc/gtk settings, this is done via the
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`gtk-cursor-theme-name` and `gtk-cursor-theme-size` setting options. Because of
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that, there's no need to do anything extra to get GTK apps to use the correct
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cursor theme.
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### Cursor config for Qt
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There is no Qt configuration for cursors. Qt programs may pick up a cursor theme
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from the desktop environment (server-side cursors), X resources, or lastly the
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"default" cursor theme.
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### Hyprcursor
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[hyprcursor](https://github.com/hyprwm/hyprcursor) is a new and efficient a
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cursor format, that allow for SVG based cursors, resulting in a much better
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scaling experience and more space-efficient themes.
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Hyprcursor is supported out of the box by Hyprland, so if you're using Hyprland,
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you can benefit from it. That said, this part is entirely optional and you can
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just stick with xcursor if you wish.
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If you do want to use hyprcursor, you will want to install [hyprcursor version
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of the rose-pine-cursor
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theme](https://github.com/ndom91/rose-pine-cursor-hyprcursor). You can simply
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git clone this repository right into `~/.local/share/icons` (sadly, there isn't
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an AUR package available at this time):
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```bash
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cd ~/.local/share/icons
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git clone https://github.com/ndom91/rose-pine-cursor-hyprcursor
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```
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Finally, you will want to set the following environment variables:
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```bash
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export HYPRCURSOR_THEME="rose-pine-hyprcursor"
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export HYPRCURSOR_SIZE="24"
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```
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Alternatively, you can also set these variables right from your hyprland config:
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```hyprlang
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env = HYPRCURSOR_THEME,rose-pine-hyprcursor
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env = HYPRCURSOR_SIZE,24
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```
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> [!WARNING]
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> Make sure to keep the existing xcursor environment variables and themes, as
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> although many apps do support server-side cursors (e.g. Qt, Chromium,
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> Electron, ...), some still don't (looking at you GTK, but also some other,
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> less common things). These applications will then fall back to XCursor (unless
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> they have built-in hyprcursor support, which is rare).
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>
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> I would therefore also recommend leaving the default theme point to the
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> XCursor theme, not to a hyprcursor theme.
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## Fonts
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Some applications use `gsettings`/`dconf` to figure out what font to use. We've
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already configured these settings, so those applications should pick up which
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font to use correctly.
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|
|
Other applications will use GTK config to figure out the default fonts. We've
|
|
configured this earlier too. (Note that GTK config doesn't support specifying a
|
|
monospace font).
|
|
|
|
The rest of the applications will use generic font family names ("standard"
|
|
fonts), as defined through `fontconfig`.
|
|
|
|
Applications also often provide configuration files where you can define which
|
|
font you wish to be using, so sometimes, you will need to set the font on a
|
|
per-application basis. We will not cover this, as each application is different.
|
|
|
|
### Installing fonts
|
|
|
|
In the installation instructions above, I did specify the 2 default font
|
|
packages that I wanted to use for my system. That said, I did not specify an
|
|
emoji font there and there are many fonts that are just useful to have on the
|
|
system, for things like text editing. The command below will install most of the
|
|
fonts that you might need:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
paru -S --needed \
|
|
libxft xorg-font-util \
|
|
ttf-joypixels otf-jost lexend-fonts-git ttf-sarasa-gothic \
|
|
ttf-roboto ttf-work-sans ttf-comic-neue \
|
|
gnu-free-fonts tex-gyre-fonts ttf-liberation otf-unifont \
|
|
inter-font ttf-lato ttf-dejavu noto-fonts noto-fonts-cjk \
|
|
noto-fonts-emoji ttf-material-design-icons-git \
|
|
ttf-font-awesome ttf-twemoji otf-openmoji \
|
|
adobe-source-code-pro-fonts adobe-source-han-mono-otc-fonts \
|
|
adobe-source-sans-fonts ttf-jetbrains-mono otf-monaspace \
|
|
ttf-ms-fonts
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
#### Nerd fonts
|
|
|
|
I have intentionally left out the `nerd-fonts` package from the above command,
|
|
as it is fairly large (about 8 gigabytes). If you wish, you can install it, as
|
|
it does contain some pretty useful fonts, however, if this package is too big
|
|
for you, you can instead install the fonts individually, as arch does ship all
|
|
nerd fonts in the package manager individually.
|
|
|
|
To install all nerd fonts, you can simply:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
paru -S --needed nerd-fonts
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
If you instead wish to only install specific nerd fonts, you can use the
|
|
following command. Note that you may want to add more fonts from nerd-fonts.
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
paru -S --needed \
|
|
ttf-firacode-nerd otf-firamono-nerd ttf-iosevka-nerd ttf-nerd-fonts-symbols \
|
|
ttf-hack-nerd ttf-heavydata-nerd ttf-gohu-nerd
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
> [!IMPORTANT]
|
|
> If you wish to use all of nerd-fonts, you will need to run the above command
|
|
> even after going through the install scripts from my dotfiles, as they only
|
|
> install specific nerd fonts (the above).
|
|
|
|
### Setting standard fonts
|
|
|
|
These standard fonts are:
|
|
|
|
- `sans-serif`: Standard font for regular text (articles, menus, ...)
|
|
- `serif`: Like sans-serif, but pure sans fonts shouldn't have the decorative
|
|
lines or tapers (also known as "tails" or "feet"). Note that these should fall
|
|
back to `sans-serif` if unset.
|
|
- `monospace`: Standard font for fixed-width fonts (text editors, calculators,
|
|
...)
|
|
- `emoji`: Standard font for emoji glyphs
|
|
|
|
It is possible to register multiple fonts for the standard font, ordered by
|
|
priorities. That way, if the first font isn't found, or it doesn't contain the
|
|
given glyph, the search will fall back to the next font in line.
|
|
|
|
To set a standard font, you will need to create a fontconfig configuration file.
|
|
You can do this on a per-user basis, in `~/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf` (or
|
|
`~/.config/fontconfig/conf.d/`) or system-wide in `/etc/fonts/local.conf` (don't
|
|
modify `/etc/fonts/fonts.conf` nor the files in `/etc/fonts/conf.d`, these are
|
|
managed by the package manager and could get overwritten). Note that the user
|
|
font settings will take priority if there are overlapping settings.
|
|
|
|
I prefer using the system-wide settings (`/etc/fonts/local.conf`):
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<?xml version='1.0'?>
|
|
<!DOCTYPE fontconfig SYSTEM "urn:fontconfig:fonts.dtd">
|
|
<fontconfig>
|
|
<alias binding="same">
|
|
<family>sans-serif</family>
|
|
<prefer>
|
|
<family>Noto Sans</family>
|
|
<family>Jost</family>
|
|
<family>Lexend</family>
|
|
<family>Iosevka Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Symbols Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Noto Color Emoji</family>
|
|
</prefer>
|
|
</alias>
|
|
|
|
<alias binding="same">
|
|
<family>serif</family>
|
|
<prefer>
|
|
<family>Noto Serif</family>
|
|
<family>Iosevka Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Symbols Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Noto Color Emoji</family>
|
|
</prefer>
|
|
</alias>
|
|
|
|
<alias binding="same">
|
|
<family>monospace</family>
|
|
<prefer>
|
|
<family>Monaspace Krypton</family>
|
|
<family>Source Code Pro Medium</family>
|
|
<family>Source Han Mono</family>
|
|
<family>Iosevka Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Symbols Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Noto Color Emoji</family>
|
|
</prefer>
|
|
</alias>
|
|
|
|
<alias binding="same">
|
|
<family>emoji</family>
|
|
<prefer>
|
|
<family>Noto Color Emoji</family>
|
|
<family>Iosevka Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Symbols Nerd Font</family>
|
|
<family>Noto Color Emoji</family>
|
|
</prefer>
|
|
</alias>
|
|
</fontconfig>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
You will now need to rebuild the font cache with:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
fc-cache -vf
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Disable Caskaydia Cove Nerd Font
|
|
|
|
For some reason, having the Caskaydia font installed was causing some issues
|
|
with other fonts for me. Caskaydia comes from `nerd-fonts`, so if you installed
|
|
them, you might want to follow along with this too, if you're also facing
|
|
issues. I'm honestly not sue why that is, however, all that's needed to solve it
|
|
is disabling this font entirely. To do so, add the following to your
|
|
`fontconfig` config:
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<?xml version="1.0"?>
|
|
<!DOCTYPE fontconfig SYSTEM "urn:fontconfig:fonts.dtd">
|
|
|
|
<fontconfig>
|
|
<selectfont>
|
|
<rejectfont>
|
|
<glob>/usr/share/fonts/nerd-fonts-git/TTF/Caskaydia*</glob>
|
|
</rejectfont>
|
|
</selectfont>
|
|
</fontconfig>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Font Manager
|
|
|
|
To preview the installed fonts, I like using `font-manager`:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
paru -S --needed font-manager
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Sources
|
|
|
|
- <https://askubuntu.com/questions/22313/what-is-dconf-what-is-its-function-and-how-do-i-use-it>
|
|
- <https://man.archlinux.org/man/dconf.1.en>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Xsettingsd>
|
|
- <https://www.reddit.com/r/gnome/comments/wt8oml/is_gnomesettingsdaemon_no_longer_a_program_i_can/>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GTK>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/XDG_Base_Directory>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Uniform_look_for_Qt_and_GTK_applications>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Qt>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Cursor_themes>
|
|
- <https://wiki.hyprland.org/Hypr-Ecosystem/hyprcursor/>
|
|
- <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Font_configuration>
|
|
- <https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=275434>
|