QGtkStyle Offers Native Gtk Look For Qt Programs 64
sekra writes "A new project called QGtkStyle by Trolltech Labs gives Qt4 based applications the possibility to integrate natively into Gtk based desktops like Gnome or Xfce. Instead of simply imitating Gtk styles QGtkStyle uses the Gtk theme engine directly. The project is still considered experimental, but is another step into better integration between Qt and Gtk applications. A project at Google Code has been set up as well." Anything that makes the various excellent Free software desktops work better together deserves kudos.
GTK-Qt (Score:5, Informative)
It's good to have the option for letting Gtk users keep their look and feel with Qt options, but I wonder why it took this long?
Is it because there wasn't much interest in Qt-based apps until now? It would surprise me, given the popularity of Amarok, K3B and the like
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I use Gnome but I still prefer Amarok and K3b (as you mentioned) to any Gnome offering so it has helped give me a coherent desktop with a much more unified feel. I think I'd like this better as it wouldn't lock me to finding widget themes that are only available for both DEs.
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I can't remember if Opera said they were converting their toolkit completely to QT, but I don't think so.
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There is a similar thing, only other way around: GTK-Qt, in fact it's 5 years old.
It's good to have the option for letting Gtk users keep their look and feel with Qt options, but I wonder why it took this long?
Is it because there wasn't much interest in Qt-based apps until now? It would surprise me, given the popularity of Amarok, K3B and the like
That answer is more simple than you think. Things like klearlooks caused good enough syndrome for a long period of time. It wouldn't surprise me if QGtkStyle leverages something new in Qt4 to make the emulation of gtk more easily possible. If you've seen the screenshots, QGtkStyle makes a good showcase of the flexibility of qt4.
Re:GTK-Qt (Score:4, Informative)
Probably hasn't happened because there are perfectly good options for a unified look already. For example, the most attractive widget theme I've found for ANY toolkit is available uniformly for them all:
QtCurve [kde-look.org]
Highly configurable and very attractive and professional looking. Install GTK1+2 and QT3+4 versions and everything looks the same regardless of what you're doing.
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*clicks link* My God, they actually have GIMP looking quite reasonable, if only it weren't for its multi-window interface.
Now, I wonder if you could get in some sort of infinite loop if you used both this and GTK-Qt at the same time.
Simple (Score:1, Interesting)
It's a good idea to make things look the same when they act the same, but it's even more important to make things look different when they act different. Qt and GTK+ act different in many subtle ways. To make one look like the other without actually acting like the other is a step backwards. It will look really cool and be much more frustrating to use; this is the kind of thing that is not a high priority for people who get paid to hack Linux.
Ask anybody who's using a beta of Fire
Great. (Score:2, Insightful)
Native QT look for GTK programs? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Given that the two of us seem to have differing viewpoints here, I'd not consider it too out of line to assume that many others may also fall to one side or the other.
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One man's "boring" is another man's "calming". One man's "eye candy" is another man's "eyes-burning-out nightmare".
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Anyway, a skinning engine isn't going to replace the file dialogue.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Unification! (Score:2, Insightful)
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GNOME was based around Gtk and started as an official GNU project to be completely Free Software because KDE was not, at the time.
This has nothing to do with technology and everything to do with ideology. I doubt very much that it'll change anytime soon. Frankly, if it did, that would be a bigger detriment.
Unification makes no sense once you realize WHY the projects ar
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This is true for software, markets, companies, countries, parties, and so on.
The reason is, that there are different parts, because not every human wants exactly the same (feature, leader, laws, philosophy, target), and sometimes those things don't mix. If you force it anyway, most poeple will be unhappy most of the time.
In this example we have the KDE people, who go for maximum configurability (at least until 4.0 where they went insane), and the Gnome people, who go for maximum "easyness
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Personally I prefer GNOME's design lately, even though KDE's technology is vastly better even in 3.5. Being based on Qt gives KDE a serious advantage, but it's a shame that doesn't always result in elegant designs.
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I would say that GNOME is the get-out-of-my-way mode, and KDE is the who the "fsck needs 85,000 options" mode.
I'm sure I would have liked KDE were I a teenager (pimp my ride, and all that crap), but now I just want to use the computer (whether it be for fun/games or programming or wasting time). IMNSHO, the two user issues that should be fixed in GNOME are:
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Here we go again-2 options when only one is needed (Score:1, Offtopic)
KDE / GNOME
Sometimes I think Linux would be better off with one option instead of many.
Sure technically "many options" is better but sometimes fewer options that are common across all machines would make the platform more desktop friendly.
I just use a text console and bash for my servers, and just remote into them...
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How about GNUstep? (Score:1)
What's been holding GNUstep back? It doesn't work like Windows?
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The *step widgets are old, they're copying what NeXT (and Apple in Rhapsody) had in 1997. Updating the widgets to look like 2008 instead of 1997 is trivial compared to what QGtkStyle is doing, and the GNUstep frameworks are easy to modify. Look at what Apple did with the NeXTstep frameworks that they're copycatting.
So even if they were "fugly", which they're not, that's an utter irrelevance.
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I love the Windowmaker dock, and I miss it on OS X. The Mac dock is just too limited.
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And how would you like it if someone took away that method and made you use a GUI in the name of consolidating options?
Re:Here we go again-2 options when only one is nee (Score:1)
Sure, so long as it's the option I like...
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Sometimes I think Linux would be better off with one option instead of many.
On what information did you base this desision? It's not like Mac OS or Windows provide one way. Last time I checked, the Windows platform offers you standard widgets (=notepad look), MFC, ComCtl, VLC (Borland), Windows Forms (.Net), WPF (.Net3) and each Microsoft app has it's own toolbars again.
MacOS gives you the choice between Cocoa and Carbon, and only gained a consistent look as of Mac OS 10.5.
I'd suggest keeping both Gtk and Qt because each option obviously attracts a different group of developers
Qt4? We need Qt3! (Score:2, Flamebait)
What about all of the Qt3 apps? I know there's gtk-qt-engine to work the other way around, but given the huge number of Qt3 apps currently being used, can we not have a decent GTK look for them?
If it wasn't for VirtualBox I wouldn't even need Qt. Amarok? No thanks, I'll take Exaile because it works and it fits in. K3B? Brasero see
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I guess I'll continue pimping my favorite theme [kde-look.org] here even though I posted it in another thread too (since you seem to genuinely want something like it). It's attractive and available uniformly for both major versions of both toolkits. Give it a try.
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My only thought from the screenshot is that the buttons look a bit glossy (which is part of what I never liked about KDE) but we'll see how it works out in the end
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still enjoying enlightenment (Score:2)
Hot damed! (Score:1, Insightful)
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Oh Happy Day! (Score:1)
+5 Insiteful (Score:2)