When you save a project, Sublime Text will create a .sublime-workspace file. In this file, there is an array of buffers, and for each buffer there is a color_scheme property. Th
AppData
-related SolutionPlease make sure that you are in a similar situation as me before trying this solution (see below). Steps:
Error loading colour scheme
reports (my case was: markdown and MarkdownEditing).%AppData%
in file explorer address bar).Sublime Text 3
, or whatever your version is..sublime-settings
file that matches the language from step 1.JSON
file when you remove lines manually. Save this file and restart Sublime Text.I've decided to post here in case some of the python script solutions didn't work for you and your situation is similar to mine. I'm using GitHub to sync my Sublime Text AppData (Windows 10), in order to keep my workflow settings the same on multiple machines. Recently, I noticed that when I uninstalled a certain package on one of my machines, I accidentally merged some configuration files for that non-existent package on my other machine. This resulted in a persistent Error loading colour scheme
, in particular for me when changing syntax to markdown (the package was MarkdownEditing
for reference).
The only way I found to reset tabs to user's chosen color scheme is to enter this in the console :
view.settings().erase("color_scheme")
This will reset the color scheme of the selected tab - unfortunately you'll have to do it for each tab. But it's still quicker than closing and reopening the tab.
I only have this issue with Sublime Text 3 on Mac OS X.
Source : https://www.sublimetext.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=19310
P.S. : If you've just updated your color scheme file, you'll sometimes have to execute this command twice. Just type the up arrow in the console to write the last command again.
Expanding on the answer given by Tot you can do this for all views in all windows that are open by using a nested list comprehension (remember this is Python so we can be pretty flexible):
[ v.settings().erase("color_scheme") for views in [ w.views() for w in sublime.windows() ] for v in views ]
This way you don't have to run the command in each tab individually.