https://qa.mandrakesoft.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1967
[EMAIL PROTECTED] changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|UNCONFIRMED |RESOLVED Resolution| |INVALID ------- Additional Comments From [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2003-02-20 20:04 ------- It is not to GTK theme to "guess" if it is running under KDE (or any other environment) and adapt accordingly.. It is up to the environment to customize GTK theme.. Moreover galaxy has not been designed to allow color changes in its palette.. ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is. ------- Reminder: ------- assigned_to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] status: RESOLVED creation_date: description: Hi, I noticed that Mandrake Galaxy gtk, while much nicer looking atm than Mandrake Galaxy KDE, does not seem to be able to change colors, at least that I've noticed. The issue being that if I'm using KDE, like many of your users are, I may choose to change the color scheme, which inturn causes GTK stuff to stick out really badly. There is a very easy way to solve this, which is why I am reporting this. libqtpixmap, a derivative of the libpixmap engine employed by most GTK themes, does color matching with KDE's color settings. Now, I'm not sure how Galaxy's theme engine works, but I'm assuming importing the code for this other engine (which is the one used for Geramik, by the way) would be relatively easy. If, on top of that, you made a little tool to adjust the color settings from Gnome, Mandrake would be the FIRST distribution (afaik) to offer both KDE and Gnome users and easy way to keep all major applications using the same color scheme! This would dramatically improve Galaxy and fix a major usability "bug" between KDE and Gnome that has never been solved before right out of the box. Using a static color palate in GTK apps is alright, but the whole unified look is only good so long as no one changes the KDE color scheme. I noted this in my review of Red Hat Linux 8 (at OfB.biz) and marked down the visual apperance somewhat because of that problem. In a way unified widgets giving the appearance of all the applications being the same, will probably confuse users MORE when the color palates won't change all of the applications. It'll probably result in support headaches, I'd suspect. Anyway, libqtpixmap is available for both GTK1 and GTK2. I can't say how much I think this would be a great thing, and everyone who has ever wanted to be able to easily adjust GTK color schemes (probably most Windows migrants) will thank-you for making the change. -Tim