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Sample of the Clearlooks 2.20 theme with various applications. Clearlooks is a theme for GTK, the main widget toolkit used by the GNOME desktop environment. It is based on Red Hat's Bluecurve theme. It was the default theme for GNOME since version 2.12 until GNOME 3 when it was replaced by Adwaita. [1]
The initial Pop theme was a fork of the Adapta GTK theme, plus other upstream projects. [24] 17.10 also introduced the Pop!_Shop software store, which is a fork of the elementary OS app store. [25] Bertel King of Make Use Of reviewed version 17.10, in November 2017 and noted, "System76 isn't merely taking Ubuntu and slapping a different name on ...
As an implementation, it exists as the default theme and icon set of the GNOME Shell and Phosh, and as widgets for applications targeting usage in GNOME. Adwaita first appeared in 2011 with the release of GNOME 3.0 as a replacement for the design principles used in Clearlooks , [ 2 ] and with incremental modernization and refinements, continues ...
Bluecurve in use with Fedora Core 1 (Yarrow) on the GNOME 2.4 Desktop. The Bluecurve window borders and GTK theme were replaced by those from Clearlooks (the former in Fedora Core 4, and the latter in Fedora Core 5). The Bluecurve icon set remained installed in Fedora 7, but was replaced as the default by Echo. [1]
The GNOME Project, i.e. all the people involved with the development of the GNOME desktop environment, is the biggest contributor to GTK, and the GNOME Core Applications as well as the GNOME Games employ the newest GUI widgets from the cutting-edge version of GTK and demonstrates their capabilities.
GTK (formerly GIMP ToolKit [2] and GTK+ [3]) is a free software cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces (GUIs). [4] It is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License, allowing both free and proprietary software to use it.
Cinnamon can be modified by themes, applets, desklets, actions, and extensions. Themes can customize the look of aspects of Cinnamon, including but not limited to the menu, panel, calendar and run dialog. Applets are icons or texts that appear on the panel. Five applets are shipped by default, and developers are free to create their own.
With that, it also included an official look and feel, as it adopted the Clearlooks theme. For the first time, the GNOME human interface guidelines were published, which attempted to improve overall usability. Tearable (detachable) menus were discontinued by default. GNOME 2 continued with the general desktop metaphor paradigm that GNOME 1 started.