![]() Of that it should be noted that in the View, Colour Scheme settings these are not independent of how you have your Microsoft Windows settings made, settings regarding colours in Microsoft Windows can affect the result of the LibreOffice 'View' setting made. (1) The 'View' settings and (2) The 'Application Colours' settings. So in all it seems there are two places that can be tweaked around with to get a Dark Theme. (And the colour change to a 'visited' link doesn't work properly, but I've now filed a bug report on that.) Note that if you try this there are tick-boxes next to the "Unvisited links" and "Visited links" - you need to put a tick in those boxes to get the link colours to act as they should. More instructions for dealing with the Application Colours settings can be seen here: Application Colors. I tried fiddling around with a Dark theme a bit more in LibreOffice and found that if you go (menu) Tools > Options.> LibreOffice > Application Colours > Colour Scheme > Scheme: and from the drop-down select the in-built option LibreOffice Dark then you get a complete Dark Scheme for the editor window. I tried the above in my Windows 10 system, liked the result, the menus and icons display is much clearer, and for now am using the Dark theme in LibreOffice. In any case, besides the theme issue you are experiencing, there are several good reasons to switch to LibreOffice anyway, some of which are given here: Considering a Switch from OpenOffice to LibreOffice? Some Useful Information (You can mess around with the Windows theme once you see the LibreOffice Dark theme correctly.) I installed LibreOffice 6 Flatpak and it does not automatically inherit my Ubuntu 16.04 dark theme. So to test out the LibreOffice Dark theme itself you might find that switching to the Windows 11 Default theme helps you see the LibreOffice Dark theme as it was intended. I installed LibreOffice 6 Snap and it automatically inherited my Ubuntu 16.04 dark theme. This might be because of the Microsoft Windows system theme you are using in Windows 11 – for example you might be using a custom Windows theme of your own and that is having an, in this instance, undesirable consequence. You can still set either to light or dark, if you want. If Windows is dark, so is LibreOffice UI and page. In LibreOffice 7.6.0.3 the default is for the UI and the page to be the same as Windows colour scheme. If you try LibreOffice and its Dark theme you might find that the menu items don't show up clearly when you use the menus. TheSmallest: M uses a black page too if a dark theme is set (not just ui) but LO only changes the ui color. ![]() LibreOffice Dark Theme Joined Rip.png (86.52 KiB) Viewed 5375 times
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