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Styling guide

Jake Stanger edited this page Oct 16, 2023 · 8 revisions

Ironbar ships with no styles by default, so will fall back to the default GTK styles.

To style the bar, create a file at ~/.config/ironbar/style.css.

Style changes are hot-loaded so there is no need to reload the bar.

Since the bar is GTK-based, it uses GTK's implementation of CSS, which only includes a subset of the full web spec (plus a few non-standard properties).

The below table describes the selectors provided by the bar itself. Information on styling individual modules can be found on their pages in the sidebar.

Selector Description
.background Top-level window.
#bar Bar root box.
#bar #start Bar left or top modules container box.
#bar #center Bar center modules container box.
#bar #end Bar right or bottom modules container box.
.container All of the above.
.widget-container The EventBox wrapping any widget.
.widget Any widget.
.popup Any popup box.

Every Ironbar widget can be selected using a kebab-case class name matching its name. You can also target popups by prefixing popup- to the name. For example, you can use .clock and .popup-clock respectively.

Setting the name option on a widget allows you to target that specific instance using #name. You can also add additional classes to re-use styles. In both cases, popup- is automatically prefixed to the popup (#popup-name or .popup-my-class).

You can also target all GTK widgets of a certain type directly using their name. For example, label will select all labels, and button:hover will select the hover state on all buttons. These names are all lower case with no separator, so MenuBar -> menubar.

Note

If an entry takes no effect you might have to use a more specific selector. For example, attempting to set text size on .popup-clipboard .item will likely have no effect. Instead, you can target the more specific .popup-clipboard .item label.

Running ironbar inspect can be used to find out how to address an element.

GTK CSS does not support custom properties, but it does have its own custom @define-color syntax which you can use for re-using colours:

@define-color color_bg #2d2d2d;

box, menubar {
    background-color: @color_bg;
}
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