The current font size of the file sidebar is to small for me. How can I make it larger?
5 Answers
Select Preferences / Browse Packages…
, and go to Theme - Default
directory.
Open Default.sublime-theme
with your editor and search for sidebar_label
string. You should find something like:
{
"class": "sidebar_label",
"color": [0, 0, 0],
"font.bold": false
}
You can add here the font size you prefer:
{
"class": "sidebar_label",
"color": [0, 0, 0],
"font.bold": false,
"font.size": 14.0
}

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I already solved this by looking at the Soda theme. But thank you for answering, I hope this QA will be useful to other users. – denysonique Dec 08 '12 at 23:43
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2There is no "Theme - Default" directory for me. In fact there are no theme folders at all in the folder that opens when I do browse packages.... – Nico Dec 25 '13 at 19:03
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4@Nico probably you are using Sublime Text 3. Package managing has slightly changed. You can find some information [here](http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/3/packages.html), "Overriding Files From a Zipped Package" paragraph. – Riccardo Marotti Dec 26 '13 at 10:58
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1By doing some experiments, I managed to figure out, that there is a small bug (feature?), which causes, that when setting `font.size` attribute to a value higher than `15.0`, entries on sidebar becomes cut off. – trejder Sep 04 '14 at 08:38
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Is there a way to override these settings in a user config file so I don't have to redo it when I update sublime? – vexe Sep 29 '15 at 07:57
Thanks! Some other settings to change font size (in these examples, smaller) of ALL the visible things!
Note that if you have a Project open (a folder) and the tabs and status bar showing, when you hit save you should see the changes realtime.
Sidebar Tree
{
"class": "sidebar_tree",
"row_padding": [0, 0],
"indent": 6,
"indent_offset": 17,
...
{
"class": "sidebar_label",
"color": [0, 0, 0],
"font.bold": false,
"font.size": 8.0
...
Tabs Open Files
{
"class": "tabset_control",
...
"content_margin": [0, 0, 3, 1],
"tab_overlap": 24,
"tab_width": 180,
"tab_min_width": 48,
"tab_height": 18,
...
{
"class": "tab_label",
...
"font.size": 8.0
...
Status Bar
{
"class": "status_bar",
...
"content_margin": [0, 0, 0, 0]
...
(I couldn't find where to set the font for the Status Bar, this will squish the bottom bar down though)

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Method probably work on the both version of ST
check you current setup theme:
1.1 open preference/settings user
1.2 cmd + f and type theme
1.3 you found your theme (may be not default, may be soda dark;) )
- install package: "PackageResourceViewer"
- cmd + shift + p - for open command pallete
type packageresourceviewer
4.1 type theme and select theme
4.2 select your current theme file (for st3 dark3 theme)
4.3 cmd +f to find "sidebar entry"
4.4 type in the block: "font.size": NUMBER to the options
4.5 save
enjoy ;)

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PackageResourceViewer is amazing, thanks a lot for sharing this. For me it was only one option to find theme file. – Alexander Beletsky Dec 05 '15 at 18:36
This question has been answered for Sublime Text 2 but worth mentioning if you are in version 3 is that you can simply copy a package file and place it in your ../Packages/User directory then override the settings there.
EDIT:
You may have to dig around some in order to find where ST3 files were placed during installation.
I'm using Ubuntu and ST3's Main Package files are located at opt/sublime_text/packages. I then copy the package to override into the .config/sublime-text-3/Packages/User directory and then make my edits to that package.

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@Leonardo Lopez, I've edited my answer to include direction if you're still having a hard time finding the local installation files. – dimmech Feb 20 '17 at 13:34
In Sublime Text 3, select Preferences >> Settings - User from the menubar, then add dpi_scale config to the file and save. That's all.
{
......,
"dpi_scale": 1.5 //set this value as your need.
}

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1this changes the font size for the entire application, which is not what OP wanted. – bryce Nov 23 '15 at 05:57