Lumiera GUI style and theming ============================= 'this page collects some pieces of information regarding the visual appearance of the Lumiera GTK GUI' GTK-3 styles ------------ Styling of GTK-3 interfaces is based on CSS, with some specific conventions about the selectors and some additional makro functions to generate colours and gradients. When GTK actually renders a widget, id consults a 'strategy object' known as *Theme Engine*, passing it the region to draw in a abstracted way. The Theme Engine in turn uses a '``style provider''' to retrieve the generic style properties it uses for drawing. Thus, the Theme Engine defines the actual meaning of any style and is in the position to understand and thus introduce additional engine specific styles and settings. GTK-3 supports the powerful 'cascading' and 'contextual selectors' from CSS. Thus the nesting of elements in the GUI forms the base for creating styling rules. Hereby, widget class names translate into ``tag'' names in the CSS selectors. Widgets may also expose CSS classes for styling -- the standard widgets define a generic set of https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/3.4/GtkStyleContext.html#gtkstylecontext-classes[predefined CSS style classes], which can be used to establish the foundation for theming. Obviously it is preferable to keep styling rules as concise, generic and systematic as possible; yet we may still refer to individual gui elements by name (`#ID`) though. Recommended reading ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * for technically precise coverage, consult the pages https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/3.4/GtkCssProvider.html[GtkCssProvider] and https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/3.4/GtkStyleContext.html#gtkstylecontext-classes[predefined style classes] in the GTK-3 reference manual. * to start, look at this http://thegnomejournal.wordpress.com/2011/03/15/styling-gtk-with-css/[introductory text], or the more http://worldofgnome.org/making-gtk3-themes-part-1-basics/[hands-on series of articles from world of gnome] * this http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?t=281568[post from fedora forum] features a conciese description of the task of theme creation * to understand the old (now obsolete) GTK-2 stylesheets, you might http://orford.org/gtk/[look here] difficulties when learning how to style ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, documentation about creating GTK-3 themes is still fragmentary. Most people seem to learn by studying existing themes. To make matters worse, CSS allows to address every widget under various contextual constraints -- and people tend to approach such abundant possibilities with a case-by-case attitude, instead of a systematic approach, and this leads to incredible large and redundant stylesheets. Often we'll also face the perils of over-constrained settings. More so, since every system contains several style sheets, and settings from those are combined (``cascaded''). When things are specified multiple times redundantly at different levels, we can never be sure as to _which_ change actually caused a visible effect. A good recommendation is really to ``probe'' settings by changing them temporarily to a really obvious value (e.g. `background-color: red`). It is just too easy to learn wrong techniques based on false conclusions. binary themes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ GTK-3 supports binary theme bundles, which combine CSS style sheets and accompanying images and vector graphics into a single archive file. See http://wibblystuff.blogspot.de/2012/06/building-binary-for-gtk3-theme.html[this blog entry] for a tutorial. But when it comes to investigating an existing theme, we need a way to 'extract' the original sources from such a distribution bundle. This can be achieved with the help of the `gresource` command. The following bash srcipt footnote:[published by mailto:peter@thecodergeek.com[Peter Gordon] to the Public Domain http://projects.thecodergeek.com/scripts/gresource-extract[at his blog] in 2012] simplifies this process, allowing to extract all resource files in a given GResource file, with the given base URL. For example, if a GResource file contained the resource with the URL `/org/foo/bar/baz.txt`, and the base URL defined as `"/org/foo/"`, then the resource named `/org/foo/bar/baz.txt` in that file would be extracted and written to `bar/baz.txt` in the current directory. [source, bash] --------------------------------- #!/bin/bash # The GResource file name GR_FILE="gtk.gresource" # base URL of the extracted resources GR_BASEDIR="/org/gnome/" which gresource &>/dev/null if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Unable to find gresource program in PATH." exit 1 fi for RSRC in $(gresource list $GR_FILE) do RSRC_FILE=$(echo "${RSRC#$GR_BASEDIR}") mkdir -p $(dirname "$RSRC_FILE") ||: gresource extract "$GR_FILE" "$RSRC" > "$RSRC_FILE" done ---------------------------------