Alas - i tried this as well, but no Ubiquity is not using the root's GTK theme either. I have them both set to the same thing so thing such as synaptic look the same, but Ubiquity remains this same ugly blue:
http://i.imgur.com/XwAHI.png ~Jeff On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 12:05 AM, Mario Limonciello <[email protected]>wrote: > Jeff: > > Is this perhaps caused by the fact that the installer actually launches as > root and drops permissions? You might try placing the .gtkrc-2.0 file in > root's home directory to see if that fixes the problem for you. If so, the > easiest no ubiquity code change solution for you would be to have a casper > script that does this for you. > > > On Tue, Jan 25, 2011 at 23:10, Jeff Hoogland <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Howdy There, >> >> I am dropping this email to those listed as some of the top contributors >> to the Ubiquity installer as one of you might know the answer to my >> question. I am the lead developer over at the Bodhi >> Linux<http://bodhilinux.com/>project and we are using your installer, but I >> am having just one issue I >> cannot seem to resolve. For some reason Ubiquity is using a GTK theme that >> is the default "fall back" when no theme is set. All the other applications >> on the live cd use the gtk theme defined in the proper .gtkrc-2.0 file. Any >> ideas why Ubiquity does not? How can I go about assigning the theme for the >> installer to use? It isn't a huge deal, but having the installer blend with >> the rest of the OS makes the install process seem a bit more seamless. >> >> Thank you for your time. >> >> Regards, >> ~Jeff Hoogland >> > > > > -- > Mario Limonciello > [email protected] >
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