![]() or, if you’ve got v8.1.3 or newer, you could just use the Notepad Dark Mode and default Dark Mode theme, which will match the markdown (preinstalled dark mode) UDL already. ![]() Again, you could edit the UDL color settings to match Obsidian (and it might be easier, because it’s starting from a dark theme already, so it’s starting closer to obsidian). ![]() However, that UDL variant still doesn’t quite match your Obsidian theme that’s because it was designed to match the colors of the v8.0-and-newer Dark Mode in Notepad (Settings > Preferences > Dark Mode), so the background colors still aren’t exactly the same as obsidian. Or go into userDefineLangs\ folder and delete the markdown._, making sure to keep the dark mode version markdown._preinstalled_DM.udl.xml … but not set for the Markdown (preinstalled) (just clear out that Ext. ![]() If you want to use that variant of the Markdown UDL, then make sure that Language > User Defined Language > Define Your Language has your Markdown extensions set for the Markdown (preinstalled dark mode)… However, if you have a recent Notepad ( v8.1.3 or newer), it will come with a second Markdown UDL, called Markdown (preinstalled dark mode), which will be closer to what you want for editing. You have to modify your UDL colors to match the theme. This is because the User Defined Languages, like Markdown (preinstalled), are not theme aware. If I switch to Language > Markdown (preinstalled), it wil look similar to what you show: With a “plain text” file, it works right: It actually looks more like Markdown inside of something like a Hugo or other content-management system for making a website.Įxample with it working with the “Obsidian” them but not in Dark Mode (so UI is white, but edited text is obsidian). ![]() Regaring file type/language: Your Style Configurator is showing the colors for the “Search Result” type, but it doesn’t look like you have the search-results panel shown. But given your screenshot, I don’t think that’s the problem. If you have global overides checkmarked (my screenshot, below, does not), then that may mess up your background color unexpectedly. A couple things you don’t show: what’s the file type (“language”) of the currently-active document, and what your Settings > Style Configurator > Global Styles > Global Override settings are. ![]()
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