Reputation: 2310
I'm writing a Visual Studio extension in C# that I hope will change the color theme depending on the time of day (After sunset the dark theme will be applied - at sunrise either the blue/light theme will be applied depending on the users preference).
I'm able to change the color theme using the WriteableSettingsStore
exposed by a ShellSettingsManager
object. When I execute the following code, the theme changes after restarting Visual Studio.
var settingsManager = new ShellSettingsManager(this);
var writeableUserStore = settingsManager.GetWritableSettingsStore(SettingsScope.UserSettings);
writeableUserStore.SetString("General", "CurrentTheme", GuidList.guidDarkTheme);
What I'd prefer is to have the theme update automatically - I've tried making use of the UpdateWindow
and RedrawWindow
functions of the User32 API, but the window doesn't reload.
So the question is - How do I "redraw" Visual Studio after changing the CurrentTheme property in the registry?
Upvotes: 17
Views: 2836
Reputation: 2046
Here's the simplest way to do it:
Overview:
Details:
To create the two settings files:
To import these files programmatically use DTE.ExecuteCommand with the "/import" parameter like this:
Add a reference to EnvDTE.dll if you don't have it already.
var dte = GetService(typeof(EnvDTE._DTE)) as EnvDTE.DTE;
dte.ExecuteCommand("Tools.ImportandExportSettings", @"/import:""C:\yourpath\LightTheme.vssettings""");
I hope that helps.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 23719
ShellSettingsManager
enables you to access and modify Visual Studio settings but only in the Windows registry. Any changes you make will not be picked up by Visual Studio until it is restarted because VS reads settings from the registry only when it starts. So this is the wrong approach.
To both change settings and apply them without requiring a restart, you will have to use DTE2.Properties as discussed in here. The following code snippet shows all the settings that can be changed programmatically from the Environment/General page (this is where you can change the theme):
EnvDTE.Properties generalProps = dte2Obj.Properties["Environment", "General"];
for (int i = 1; i <= generalProps.Count; ++i)
{
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine(
generalProps.Item(i).Name + ": " + generalProps.Item(i).Value);
}
By default in VS2013, this code will produce the following output:
AnimationSpeed: 5
RichClientExperienceOptions: 65535
WindowMenuContainsNItems: 10
CloseButtonActiveTabOnly: True
UseTitleCaseOnMenu: False
AutoAdjustExperience: True
Animations: True
AutohidePinActiveTabOnly: False
ShowStatusBar: True
MRUListContainsNItems: 10
All of these settings can be changed and VS will immediately apply the changes. The problem is that there is no property that enables you to change the theme. That's why I think it cannot be done.
Upvotes: 11