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Re: [platform-dev] Linux: handle problematic GTK3 themes



On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 1:44 PM Aleksandar Kurtakov <akurtako@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Can it be that the preferences app on this screenshot is gtk 2 while swt is gtk 3 and there are missing gtk3 themes installed on the system?

If it's Mate - it's quite likely, if it's Cinnamon not so much.
 

On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 1:34 PM Thomas Singer <ts-swt@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
An extreme example of controls that looks much different in Linux Mint
17.1 and SmartGit (using SWT 4.922) can be seen in the attached
screenshot. Setting -Dorg.eclipse.swt.internal.gtk.noThemingFixes has no
effect. It looks rather like some completely different theme is used.

--
Best regards,
Thomas Singer
=============
syntevo GmbH
https://www.syntevo.com
https://www.syntevo.com/blog


On 2019-01-07 16:29, Thomas Singer wrote:
> Hi Eric,
> On 07/01/2019 16:21, Eric Williams wrote:
>> Hi Thomas,
>>
>> On 1/7/19 4:30 AM, Thomas Singer wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> It looks like some GTK themes cause more problems on Linux than
>>> others, e.g. we have a couple of problems with Mint-X on Linux Mate
>>> 17.1.
>>>
>>> According to <https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/3.20/gtk-running.html>
>>> it should be possible to change the theme of a certain application by
>>> setting the environment variable GTK_THEME before launching the
>>> application (ours usually is launched from a .sh script so adding the
>>> "export GTK_THEME=..." line would be no problem). Unfortunately, this
>>> does not work - it simply uses the default Mint-X theme.
>>
>> We have support in SWT to read the GTK_THEME environment variable, so
>> this should work. How are you using it? IIRC the theme has to be
>> installed on the system in order for GTK_THEME to work.
>
> In my Linux Mint installation I can select, e.g. "Clearlooks" in the GUI
> for the controls. Adding
>
> export GTK_THEME=Clearlooks
>
> before launching SmartGit has no effect - it still uses the system
> setting of Mint-X.
>
>>> How do you actually manage the problems of different themes in
>>> combination with SWT? Do you suggest the users to switch their system
>>> theme? Do you abort the application with an error if a known buggy
>>> theme is detected?
>>
>> SWT only officially supports the default GTK theme (Adwaita). A lot of
>> themes follow the Adwaita style of declaring colors and other such
>> things so it's usually not an issue, however there are exceptions. In
>> these cases we do not try to fix issues in broken themes as there are
>> no manpower/resources to do so. It's not really SWT's responsibility
>> to fix broken GTK themes anyways.
>
>  From the user perspective it looks like the SWT-based applications are
> broken, because native applications simply work. Usually, users also
> don't want to change the system theme because it looks good for them and
> they might have selected it because they like it.
>
>> That said, if your theme is "difficult" and causes issues in SWT, you
>> can feed some GTK CSS to SWT via the
>> org.eclipse.swt.internal.gtk.cssFile property. SWT will load the CSS
>> in this file at startup. I believe bug 527729 had some discussion on
>> this matter.
>
> Thanks you.
>
> Quite related: why some controls, e.g. buttons, in native GTK
> applications look so different than the ones in a SWT application?
>
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--
Alexander Kurtakov
Red Hat Eclipse Team


--
Alexander Kurtakov
Red Hat Eclipse Team

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