Ralf Jung wrote:
> Hi,
> 
>> It's true, not everyone is using Tango, but it's the closest thing we
>> have to a standard.  It certainly wouldn't hurt to make Wine compatible
>> with multiple icon sets and then let packagers choose which one to use,
>> so I could provide a Gnome-wine and a KDE-wine and so on.
>>
>> Starting with Tango seems like the best first bet though.
> I hope this does not sound offending, but why is Tango more of a standard 
> than, e.g., Oxygen? I'm really just curious, please don't think I want to 
> start a flame-war here. And, of course, I'd like to see wine integrated 
> regardless of the desktop environment in use :D
> 
> Several icon packets sound great. I wonder if it is possible for wine to 
> automatically use the icon set of the environment? Of course some icons don't 
> exist in the Linux world, but for example message boxes or icons for files 
> and folders are available this way. Then one would not need to make a KDE- 
> and a Gnome-wine.
> 

Tango has some nice style guidelines for making individual icons on
their website, for one, and not just a color palette.

Thanks,
Scott Ritchie


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