Hopefully, some of these changes are met and I worry sometimes that
Ubuntu will look even sloppier once it completely stops using Gnome.
Will Ubuntu move to only using Gtk 3 applications? What about all the
Launchpad user contributions?
Check out this discussion: Thoughts on Gtk Qt and convergance
<http://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/thoughts-on-gtk-qt-and-convergance/531/5>
On 09/11/2016 05:22 PM, Jason Benjamin wrote:
QT --
Unless you include themes (example) with Ubuntu:
http://www.deviantart.com/browse/all/?section=&global=1&q=kde+ambiance+theme
http://www.deviantart.com/browse/all/?section=&global=1&q=kde+radiance+theme&offset=0
On 09/06/2016 02:16 PM, Jason Benjamin wrote:
BUMP.
Okay, overlay scrollbars can be turned off with deconf, but Qt still
doesn't match the theme.
I made a similar post here one time, with no answer: ubuntuforums.org
<https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2248622&p=13144512#post13144512>
Apparently it could be a lot of themes, but I found this link:
https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1518404#p1518404
On 09/03/2016 10:31 AM, Jason Benjamin wrote:
After testing Ubuntu Xenial Xerus, I'd wanted to check out how Gtk 3
interfaces blend with the other desktop libraries in the software
repositories. I was very let down.
Gtk 2 interfaces still use overlay scrollbars which noticeably clash
with the Gtk 3 applications. LibreOffice draws with Swing using a
Gtk 2 style, which looks bad too. This can be changed to Gtk 3
using Synaptic, but the some of the icon controls are obscured by
the dark color of the default theme. Eclipse, which is written in
SWT, uses Gtk 2 also, even though it's been Gtk 3 capable for a good
amount of time. WxWidgets is compiled for Gtk 2, even though it can
be compiled for Gtk 3 support.
Qt whatever the version is, is not themed like the Gtk interfaces at
all.
The operating system I'm using right now is Kubuntu, and this kind
of incongruence is virtually unnoticeable.
--
[The Computer] was the first machine man built that
assisted the power of his brain instead of the strength
of his arm. - Grace Murray Hopper
--
[The Computer] was the first machine man built that
assisted the power of his brain instead of the strength
of his arm. - Grace Murray Hopper
--
[The Computer] was the first machine man built that
assisted the power of his brain instead of the strength
of his arm. - Grace Murray Hopper
--
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