Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jakub Steiner
07cae5377a theme: use cantarell light
- lock screen
- date in the calendar popover

fixes issue #45
2018-02-20 09:19:09 +00:00
Jakub Steiner
436cac4134 theme: use cantarell light
- lock screen
- date in the calendar popover

fixes issue #45
2018-02-20 09:19:09 +00:00
Carlos Garnacho
ca095acd34 theme: Update OSK theme
Enter/shift/layout/hide buttons have been made to use our own assets, key
labels have been made slightly bigger, and incorrect padding has been
removed from the extended keys popovers.

https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/46
2018-02-15 21:30:54 +01:00
Florian Müllner
3fe45e29e4 theme: Replace gnome-shell-sass submodule with subtree
As the style has grown bigger and more complex, generating the different
variants from a common source has been a good decision. However given how
intertwined the theme is with gnome-shell itself, relying on a submodule
has proven to be quite painful. And as things stand right now, it is going
to get worse:

 - using either pre-generated CSS or generating it at build time is
   odd, and violates meson's strict separation between source- and
   build directories; we are therefore considering dropping the CSS
   and depending on sassc to always generate it at build time

 - with the migration to gitlab, our workflow shifts decisively towards
   branches; however there is no support in either git or gitlab for
   handling two brances of separate repositories consecutively, which
   gets particularly awkward for branches in a private namespace

With those pain points in mind, we will adjust our setup as follows:

 - remove the submodule from gnome-shell and instead import the
   sass as subtree

 - after that, the sass sources can be changed like any other files
   in the repository, and regular contributors can forget that there
   was ever anything special about them

 - whenever we want to update the classic style, we can push the subtree
   changes and bump gnome-shell-extension's sass submodule

In other words: Updating the classic styling will become slightly more
painful, but not much and only for me; in return, everyone else can
stop fiddling with submodules (and buy me a beer).
2018-02-09 21:45:09 +00:00