On Fri, 2002-09-27 at 19:37, Seth Nickell wrote: > On Thu, 2002-09-26 at 14:38, Havoc Pennington wrote: > > > > <bordoley msu edu> writes: > > > > > > I'm not sure if this has been discussed in this thread or not, but I think > > > this issue may be a rare case where accessibility requirements contradict with > > > general usability. I for one do not want to see a melding of all "appearance" > > > related capplets (ie. font, theme, background etc.). However for users with > > > accessibility concerns having all the "look and feel" options in one > > > convenient place is probably a requirement. So I'm wondering if a compromise > > > can be met. What I'm thinking is that we keep the current capplets but add an > > > additional appearance capplet to the accessibility preferences menus which > > > provides all of these options in a way that meets the requirements of users > > > for whom accessibility is an issue. Thoughts? > > > > > > > Well, I still have some hope we could have a nice simple metatheme > > feature like Windows XP does... > > WinXPs metatheme feature is way more complicated than it would need to > be if it were just a THEME feature rather than a "capplet that changes > preferences that live elsewhere" (aka "metatheme") feature. I still see > no reason other than accesibility to make the theme capplet control any > settings except appearance of buttons, icons, borders, etc. To provide > more expression to theme authors we can even add buttons that allow > users to explicitly select non-theme elements that the theme author > suggests are complimentary (such as backgrounds). > > See: > > http://www.gnome.org/~seth/theme-set-editor.png > http://www.gnome.org/~seth/theme-set-selector.png Getting there, but in the editor, I would have made a table with tickboxes for the theme parts, and shown the drop-downs depending on the line selected. And in the Selector, have a list of tickboxes for the parts of the theme that should be applied. That could also solve the problem below: Apply suggested parts: [ ] Font size and colour [X] Background [X] Font [X] Window borders > The caveat with this interface is that it requires a hack to work with > accesibility (namely accesibility theme's recommendations get > automatically applied rather than just showing up as recommendations). > The alternative, which I strongly suggest in support of DaveB, Maciej, > and others is to not try conflate the accesibility features needed here > into theme features. I think this is shifting the whole definition of > what a theme is, and certainely changing what a reasonable interface is. What do you think ? -- /Bastien Nocera http://hadess.net
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