Frank Steinmetzger posted on Sun, 27 Apr 2014 18:17:06 +0200 as excerpted: > I’m having a slight issue with my KDE on Gentoo. I enabled the > application switcher theme with larger icons, as I dislike the default > one ever since it started showing all non-selected icons in greyscale.
Fellow gentooer. =:^) FWIW I had no idea what the default was, so I went thru all the switchers and it seems only "informational" displays that grayscale-except-for- selected-icon behavior. So you should be able to switch to any of the others. And FWIW, I use "thumbnail" as my primary switcher, here, with "flipswitch" as secondary. A scaled down version of the window itself is a lot easier to use than the icon. Tho I do believe that requires working/enabled OpenGL, but any of the several scaled-window switchers really /really/ increase the usability of the switcher if they're available, at least for me. > Some applications still appear with a small icon (i.e. 48×48 Pixel) in > it. One of them is Konqueror (though that doesn’t bother me much), and > more importantly Firefox. Initially I hoped it to be a packaging problem > – the Gentoo package only installed a 48×48 icon into > /usr/share/pixmaps. So I filed a bug about that.¹ > > You can read some more details in there (it’s not very long), because I > did have big icons with Arch linux which shared its home partition with > my Gentoo system. Interesting. FWIW, I'm running kde-live -9999 versions (from the kde overlay) of most packages here(tho I've not updated for about 10 days I'd guess), so it's very likely I'm running a newer kde than you. But I did experiment a bit with the large-icons switcher, and have a large aurora icon here. (I have the bindist flag on so get the generic aurora name and icons, not the firefox branding.) But I do have a smaller icon for pan, which only ships the pixmap icon, not the newer hicolor, etc, icons. So I see the problem, just not with firefox. (I don't actually have konqueror installed so can't check what size icon I get for it.) Further, I did experiment with temporarily moving the entire hicolor directory elsewhere, and after a firefox and kwin restart (well, for kwin I switched the switcher config and hit apply, since I had it open, which triggers a kwin restart), I DID get the small version of the firefox/ aurora icon. But I only saw that after restarting both of them, the takeaway being that if you're doing any experimenting, be sure to restart both kwin and the apps you're checking the icon with (restarting X/KDE should work too, but isn't necessary), or you'll see the old size. Anyway, I know it's possible to get the large size firefox/aurora icon on gentoo with kde's large-icons switcher, since I have it here. And I know it's possible to force the small one by killing the hicolor directory. But there's apparently some key to the puzzle we're missing, still. Meanwhile, while you sort of checked the reverse of this by checking with arch using the same homedir, you might wish to try either setting up a new test-user temporarily, thus getting all default settings for testing, or (with X/kde off and preferably done while not logged in as your normal user) temporarily renaming your homedir (creating a new empty dir to use in its place for the test), so you can try all default settings on your normal user. If the problem is gone with all default settings (except for changing the switcher to large icons, obviously), the problem is obviously in the user settings, not in the system config. If it's in your user settings you can then try bisecting the problem down to an individual file by testing first just the removal of $KDEHOME (or ~/.kde if you don't set the var), then say with all of $KDEHOME but share/config or share/apps (nearly all kde settings are in one or the other), then with the other one if necessary, then with more or less half of that, then half of that... until you isolate the problem to an individual file, at which point you can either blow it away, or continue bisecting into it using a text editor, until you find the specific section and then line. If the problem is still there with all default user settings, then it must be either the difference in versions (if any) between arch and gentoo's kde, OR, perhaps, a distro-specific patch applied by one or the other. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.