Florian Müllner fbf5f98eea shellMountOperation: Share a style class
Two of the dialogs use virtually identical styles, so it makes sense
to reuse the actual style classes.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784985
2017-07-16 18:10:22 +02:00
..
2009-11-12 11:42:01 -05:00
2016-11-04 16:08:10 +01:00

Summary
-------

* Do not edit the CSS directly, edit the source SCSS files and process them with SASS (running
  `make` should do that when you have the required software installed, as described below;
  run `./parse-sass.sh` manually if it doesn't)
* Most SASS preprocessors should produce similar results, however the build system
  integration and 'parse-sass.sh' script use sassc. You should be able to install
  it with `pkcon install sassc` or your distribution's package manager.

How to tweak the theme
----------------------

Adwaita is a complex theme, so to keep it maintainable it's written and processed in SASS, the
generated CSS is then transformed into a gresource file during gtk build and used at runtime in a 
non-legible or editable form.

It is very likely your change will happen in the _common.scss file. That's where all the widget 
selectors are defined. Here's a rundown of the "supporting" stylesheets, that are unlikely to be the 
right place for a drive by stylesheet fix:

_colors.scss        - global color definitions. We keep the number of defined colors to a necessary minimum, 
                      most colors are derived from a handful of basics. It is an exact copy of the gtk+ 
                      counterpart. Light theme is used for the classic theme and dark is for GNOME3 shell 
                      default.

_drawing.scss       - drawing helper mixings/functions to allow easier definition of widget drawing under
                      specific context. This is why Adwaita isn't 15000 LOC.

_common.scss        - actual definitions of style for each widget. This is where you are likely to add/remove
                      your changes.
                      
You can read about SASS at http://sass-lang.com/documentation/. Once you make your changes to the
_common.scss file, you can either run make or the ./parse-sass.sh script.