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Re: Theme bundle proof-of-concept (was: Look & feel, future plans)


From: Alexander Malmberg
Subject: Re: Theme bundle proof-of-concept (was: Look & feel, future plans)
Date: Thu, 09 May 2002 01:40:24 +0200

Hi,

Well, talk is cheap and code is good, so I've implemented a really
simple and silly theme bundle. There's a screenshot:

http://w1.423.telia.com/~u42308495/alex/sillytheme1.png

and the source:

http://w1.423.telia.com/~u42308495/alex/sillytheme-0.0.tar.gz

There's a theme.patch that should be applied (to NSApplication.m). It
adds a bit of code to the backend bundle initialization that loads any
additional bundles specified in the defaults key 'GUIThemeBundles' (full
paths only; it currently only works if the backend is a bundle). The
stuff in the theme-test/ directory is the actual bundle. Compile it and
point 'GUIThemeBundles' at it and start your favorite app, eg.:

defaults write NSGlobalDomain GUIThemeBundles /foo/theme-test.bundle/
openapp foo.app

To stop using it, just delete the defaults key, eg.:

defaults delete NSGlobalDomain GUIThemeBundles


Anyway, this is how I think that themes should work. A generic
bundle-loading mechanism in gui would be nice, and is really all that is
needed, although a clean separation of rendering and everything else in
the code would make it easier to write theme bundles.

There are a bunch of interesting ideas for bundles, eg. change NSMenu et
al to use some different method of displaying menus, like horizontal
menus or using windowmaker's menu support.

- Alexander Malmberg




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