Hi, I had an idea which I think could dramatically improve the cross toolkit display of widgets. At the moment toolkits load their settings and a style from files stored locally where the client is running. The problem with this approach is that every toolkit has its own place and means of storing these settings. When programs are run from more than one toolkit they often appear very different. The problem can also be seen when running a remote X application onto a Windows or Mac OSX desktop. The problem is that the X app will display using its toolkit's settings and will not try to blend in with the Windows or OSX desktop. What would be great is that if I am at a MAC OSX desktop and remote display an X application that the widget toolkit will render the display using MAC OSX style guidelines and not some configuration stored on the remote computer. When I then move to a Windows XP machine and run the same program it should look like a Windows XP program. When I mix different toolkits on the same display (eg gtk and Qt) they should appear the same. The solution I was thinking to this problem will be to introduce some standard properties which could be associated with the root window on the X display. One property would be the widget rendering style to use. This would be a string property naming the general style used on the display (e.g "Window XP", "Mac OSX", etc). The toolkit would look at this property and load the appropriate style to ensure widgets are correctly displayed. There would have to be a unification of style names for Gtk and QT toolkits or else a means for the user to specify a mapping from the display toolkit style to the style that should be used by the toolkit. Other properties that would be good to store would be the colors to use (e.g. selected text color, background color, text foreground color etc). I noticed there is a project XSettings on freedesktop.org but I could not find out much about it to know how this idea fits in with that. It appears to me that XSettings is only the colors, double click delay etc but does not provide a means to specify the look and feel of the display. If these properties could be standardised and Gtk and Qt modified to use these properties then an X display would always look consistent even when displaying on a Windows or Mac OSX desktop. It would alleviate the need for every toolkit having a different place to store these settings as the settings would be stored on the display itself and not necessarily on the computer where the X application is running. Does anyone think this would be a good idea? Nicholas Allen
On Sat, 2004-12-11 at 14:18 +0100, Nicholas Allen wrote:> I noticed there is a project XSettings on freedesktop.org but I could not find > out much about it to know how this idea fits in with that. It appears to me > that XSettings is only the colors, double click delay etc but does not > provide a means to specify the look and feel of the display.XSettings does indeed already have a "Net/ThemeName" setting which gtk uses. Havoc
Hi, I had an idea which I think could dramatically improve the cross toolkit display of widgets. At the moment toolkits load their settings and a style from files stored locally where the client is running. The problem with this approach is that every toolkit has its own place and means of storing these settings. When programs are run from more than one toolkit they often appear very different. The problem can also be seen when running a remote X application onto a Windows or Mac OSX desktop. The problem is that the X app will display using its toolkit's settings and will not try to blend in with the Windows or OSX desktop. What would be great is that if I am at a MAC OSX desktop and remote display an X application that the widget toolkit will render the display using MAC OSX style guidelines and not some configuration stored on the remote computer. When I then move to a Windows XP machine and run the same program it should look like a Windows XP program. When I mix different toolkits on the same display (eg gtk and Qt) they should appear the same. The solution I was thinking to this problem will be to introduce some standard properties which could be associated with the root window on the X display. One property would be the widget rendering style to use. This would be a string property naming the general style used on the display (e.g "Window XP", "Mac OSX", etc). The toolkit would look at this property and load the appropriate style to ensure widgets are correctly displayed. There would have to be a unification of style names for Gtk and QT toolkits or else a means for the user to specify a mapping from the display toolkit style to the style that should be used by the toolkit. Other properties that would be good to store would be the colors to use (e.g. selected text color, background color, text foreground color etc). I noticed there is a project XSettings on freedesktop.org but I could not find out much about it to know how this idea fits in with that. It appears to me that XSettings is only the colors, double click delay etc but does not provide a means to specify the look and feel of the display. If these properties could be standardised and Gtk and Qt modified to use these properties then an X display would always look consistent even when displaying on a Windows or Mac OSX desktop. It would alleviate the need for every toolkit having a different place to store these settings as the settings would be stored on the display itself and not necessarily on the computer where the X application is running. Does anyone think this would be a good idea? Nicholas Allen