Gnome Titlebar Buttons Smaller

Gnome Titlebar Buttons Smaller 10,0/10 1366 votes

Description: OPEN THE LARGER SCREENSHOTS IN A NEW TAB AN ENLARGE TO SEE FULL VIEWGnome-PROMade by paulxfceA clear and easy-on-the-eyes theme that is meant for those who use the Gnome-desktop professionally on a daily basis. The focus in this theme is compatibility: GTK-2 applications and GTK-3 applications look virtually the same.

  1. Gnome Titlebar Buttons Smaller Than Free

Gnome Titlebar Buttons Smaller Than Free

Hi there, neat theme, love it.However, got few issues.I'm trying using it in MATE. Overall it is great, I love it for smaller controls but all variants apart from Dark1.2 block the background image. I fixed this by commenting outbackground-image:linear-gradientin section.background in./gtk-3.0/gtk.cssRelated: MATE uses white font in its keyboard layout applet for showing the current locale and this is not seen at all in light versions of the theme. I understand that you cannot change the background on an app-based basis. Thus, will dig inside gtk.css as well.

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Will report if can fix it smoothly.Also, MATE cannot see the variant 'Pro II' as it is packed as.xz while MATE looks for.gx archives only upon 'Install.' Minus these minor and perhaps just MATE related issues - extreme work, keep going, dude! The problem is not theme-related. The problem is that Synaptic Package manager is a root-application. Which do not follow the theme, because there is any in the root!

Titlebar

So what you need to is this:1. Make sure you have a.font, a.icons and a.themes folder in your home folder2.

We need to make symbolic links to these file in the root directory with these terminal commands:sudo ln -s /home/username/.themes /root/.themessudo ln -s /home/username/.icons /root/.iconssudo ln -s /home/username/.fonts /root/.fontsAnd replace the username (and its brackets) with you home folder name. Then execute them one by one.3.

Restart your computer; et voila all is solved.If, for some reason, it didn't work check your root folder with this terminal command: sudo nautilus, this wil open a root-nautilus window. Look in the file-system that pops up for thr root-folder.

If the three files (.fonts/.icons/;themes) are there? Then you have done you job right and everything should work if you restart. Hi Guys,First of all thanks a lot for your support and your patienceSorry but it seems to me the easiest to understand if it is a misunderstanding ifI attach an image of the Synaptic screen to make it clear what I mean (different gray shades in the buttons part, on the left).

It may be that, at the end, this is its normal appearance? See, please (I hope the link works).I followed all the instructions you have given me and nothing has changed. I had already applied it to the existing folders (only.icons and.themes).I can only say that the.fonts folder was not present in my home (now it is created but is empty). Now all 3 folders are present and linked to the root folder.Even copying the theme into the usr / share / themes folder, it does not change anything in Synaptic's appearance.I'm Italian, sorry for my poor Englishthanks again for the support.

The screenshot sows that Synaptic Package manager uses the usual toolbar- background, but then it stops when there are no more buttons to show. From then on, the original default background appears, which uses this gradient:background-image:linear-gradient(to bottom left,rgba(235,240,244,1),rgba(221,227,232,1),rgba(221,227,232,1),rgba(238,244,246,1)); Which is a four-color-gradient. That moves from the right top to the left bottom of the area. So colors can different within the same background-area. Hi Guys,First of all thanks a lot for your support and your patiencesorry if I use this channel to answer but it seems to me the easiest to understand if it is a misunderstanding.In fact I want to attach an image of the Synaptic screen to make it clear what I mean (different gray shades in the buttons part, on the left). It may be that at the end this is its normal appearance?I followed all the instructions you have given me and nothing has changed. I had already applied it to the existing folders (only.icons and.themes).I can only say that the.fonts folder was not present in my home (now it is created but is empty).

Gnome title bar buttons smaller windows

Now all 3 folders are present and linked to the root folder.Even copying the theme into the usr / share / themes folder, it does not change anything in Synaptic's appearance.I'm Italian, sorry for my poor Englishthanks again for the support.

So far I have done:git clone git://git.gnome.org/gtk+then I have create file some.css in gtk/theme/Adwaita with yours code in it and then I've append to gtk.css:@import url('resource:///org/gtk/libgtk/theme/Adwaita/some.css');What I need to do now to remove the bottom border on title bars?You need to install sass and then run parse-sass.sh to generate the css files. After that, create an index.theme file and install into /.local/share/themes with the modified Adwaita theme under the folder gtk-3.0. This is a matter of taste issue, to me it's more consistent to have csd and ssd windows decoration sharing the same look, also the 'open' titlebar created quite a bit of problems themewise, sorry guys I don't really feel like going back to what we used to have.Regarding the terminal it looks ok to me with the new style menubar (the terminal has style problems which can't be solved by the theme tho, like a missing frame around the vte window. But this is another story), gtk+2 apps looks pretty bad since the old menubar design and old notebook design, I'm working on fixing gtk+2 Adwaita (well at least I'm trying to, my brain discarded all the old theming stuff infos unfortunatelly).1.

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