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Subtly change the color of your Visual Studio Code workspace. Ideal when you have multiple VS Code instances, use VS Live Share, or use VS Code's Remote features, and you want to quickly identify your editor.
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johnpapa/vscode-peacock
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Subtly change the color of your Visual Studio Code workspace. Ideal when you have multiple VS Code instances, use VS Live Share, or use VS Code's Remote features, and you want to quickly identify your editor.
Read the extensivedocumentation here which includes a guide on how to use Peacock and achangelog
- OpenExtensions sideBar panel in Visual Studio Code and choose the menu options forView → Extensions
- Search for
Peacock
- ClickInstall
- ClickReload, if required
Read the extensivedocumentation here which includes a guide on how to use Peacock and achangelog
Let's see Peacock in action!
- Create/Open a VSCode Workspace (Peacock only works in a Workspace)
- Press
F1
to open the command palette - Type
Peacock
- Choose
Peacock: Change to a favorite color
- Choose one of the pre-defined colors and see how it changes your editor
Now enjoy exploring the rest of the features explained in the docs!
- Peacock docs are hosted on Azure ->Get a Free Azure Trial
- Get VS Code
- Create your first VS Code extension
- VS Code Extension API
- Learn how to add WebPack bundles to your favorite extensions
Inspiration comes in many forms. These folks and teams have contributed either through ideas, issues, pull requests, or guidance. Thank you!
The VS Code team and their incrediblyhelpful guide for creating extensions
Here are some greatexamples for extensions from the VS Code team
Contribution guidelines are located here
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows theall-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
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Subtly change the color of your Visual Studio Code workspace. Ideal when you have multiple VS Code instances, use VS Live Share, or use VS Code's Remote features, and you want to quickly identify your editor.