Re: gnome desktop integration library



Jonathan Blandford wrote:
Right now, there are three major uses for GTK+:

* the GNOME Desktop toolkit (rich desktop experience)
* a cross-platform toolkit (LCD approach)
* an embedded platform (pick-and-choose)


It's a bit of a false choice; I don't think the LCD approach is required in a cross-platform toolkit. If the nature of one platform really requires doing xyz in most apps, but xyz cannot be done on all platforms, an API that contains feature tests ("gtk_platform_has_foo()"), or an API in a platform specific header ("gdkx.h"), is imo _right_. Just because it's a little grotty doesn't mean GTK should be all purity of essence and leave the problem dumped in the laps of app developers.

To me the path GTK+ is obviously on, in practice, is that it's written to be a desktop toolkit, and people use it in embedded by subsetting it or hacking it up a little. Which seems fine; I think Qt pretty much has the same model, with perhaps more attention to providing tools for the subsetting and hacking.

Right now, GTK+ is walking a delicate balance between these three
things.

But, assuming it's a required choice - for the first two, is it GTK+ walking the delicate balance, or is it *almost all the important apps* and the *GNOME desktop itself* in terms of user experience?

Aren't Firefox, OO.org, GIMP, AbiWord, etc. also walking that balance?

Isn't GNOME effectively restricted from diverging too much from the "normal" behavior of a desktop, because in practice all the apps (and at this stage, users) expect it to be largely similar to other platforms?

Even ignoring Windows, just the freedesktop.org specs (EWMH, autostart, menus) all assume a fairly standard desktop.

My point is, it's not like GNOME is going to radically diverge from what can be cross-platform. Once you make the macro-level decisions like the desktop has a panel with an app launcher menu, there's a task list, each window has a menu, apps consist of document windows and dialogs, etc. then things are fairly locked and loaded. You aren't talking about suddenly changing to another model sometime.

Here are some tradeoff options as I see it:
 - allow apps to be mostly cross-platform. take advantage of basic
   "standardness" of GNOME.
 - make big, fundamental changes in GNOME platform vs. others.
   require all apps to be fundamentally GNOME-specific.
   Don't support running cross-platform apps. Take advantage
   of ability to do strong unique user experience for GNOME.
   e.g. OLPC is doing this, right? with Sugar.
 - gratuitously have distinct API for GNOME platform, making big
   pain for app developers, but have user experience be the
   "standard" one anyway.

The last is both the lazy/default thing to do, and the stupidest, if it isn't obvious.

 There are some features that work in the first case, but not
the other two (such as the proposed 'Open With...' dialog).

Why not? Thunderbird and Firefox on Windows have an Open With dialog, so obviously apps have a use for it (and it's possible to implement it).

Since we
can't quite resolve it or don't have the time to do the work to handle
all worlds.

The don't have time argument leads to a libno-time-to-port-to-windows which kind of sucks as a way to organize the platform. Didn't GTK used to have a policy that stuff went in for X and the Windows team had to keep up? It was a little harsh, but given the fact that nobody else knew how to code the Windows bits, maybe the only feasible approach.

Havoc




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