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I have objective C code to detect dark mode to change the status bar:

[[NSDistributedNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self selector:@selector(darkModeChanged:) name:@"AppleInterfaceThemeChangedNotification" object:nil]; 

Similarly, how can we do the same in python?

3 Answers 3

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Try these following lines wherever you want to detect the mode (dark mode or light mode).

center = NSDistributedNotificationCenter.defaultCenter() center.addObserver_selector_name_object_(self,"enableDarkMode",'AppleInterfaceThemeChangedNotification',None) 
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I don't know if you can do this directly from within python. But at least you can invoke the terminal command defaults read -g AppleInterfaceStyle.

Currently its behavior is like this: If its exit code is 0, it reports "dark mode". If it is 1 (error), you can assume light mode. This isn't very clean in my opinion, but it works and is used successfully from a Java program.

How to spawn a new process from within python is a different question, which has already been answered.

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In python os module may come in handy to detect the mode.

Basically, we use python to access and run terminal command to find AppleInterfaceStyle property in default settings.

import os has_interface = os.popen("defaults find AppleInterfaceStyle").read() if not has_interface: print("Use a light Style") else: interface_system = os.popen("defaults read -g AppleInterfaceStyle").read() print("Interface Style:" + interface_system) # interface_system = 'Dark\n' 

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