O mundo acabou em 2012 e estamos vivendo num delírio coletivo
ChristianWS
O negócio é absolutamente insano, ex-presidente que vive xingando as urnas eletrônicas têm encontro com hacker, e o hacker foi chamado pela maluca que saiu atirando nas vésperas da eleição. Não tem como ficar mais absurdo...
... Esse aí é a porra do ráquer de Araraquara? O mesmo maluco que vazou as conversas do Moro e do Dallagnol?
Tem dois problemas com esse argumento:
- A comunidade aqui não tem membros ou engajamento suficiente para ser auto-sustentável, então puxar as notícias do r/Brasil parece ser uma medida boa até a gente atingir uma certa estabilidade.
- Maioria do pessoal que fugiu pro Lemmy quer usar o Reddit, mas sentem que não devem.
Huh, you are right. It is weirdly harder to figure out the person I'm replying to depending on the platform I'm using.
One reply ago you were fine with apps hiding the close button.
You really can't, I tried using gtk3-nocsd and it didn't really work that well
And you can remove them using window rules. You can't remove a CSD title bar, or even add one, trust me, I tried.
I mean, disabling the close button is probably on the top 10 ways to give a PC user a panic attack. And there was a time when games had an exit button on fullscreen.
Also, what the hell, if Undertale can jumpscare the player while still using Windows titlebar on display then SSDs are not an issue.
I know that, the question is why. The discussion started with a user asking for talks about Plasma going with Client Side Decorations in the future. To which I say: No.
A header bar is the logical conclusion of CSD, because it makes sense once you give window decoration responsibilities to app devs. That is space that the dev can use to cram buttons and other features, why wouldn't they use it?
While KDE could create documentation that suggest using CSD in a way that looks similar to the current title bars, that is more what you'd call guidelines than actual rules. It is not the great equalizer that SSD is. If an app uses SSD, there is no question on whether the Title Bar will look good, it will look the way it is supposed to, no wondering if the developer implemented the design in the correct manner. With CSD, the dev could not have followed KDE's guidelines, and even then, there is the question of what to do when you are not in Plasma. Should an app made with KDE Guidelines in mind make changes to its CSD when it runs on GNOME? Some GNOME apps don't, should it be mutual?
And that is not even to mention the idea of using CSD to look like it is SSD. Again, you are trusting the app dev to make something that is currently taken care by the system. It doesn't really makes any sense, you are adding another point of failure.
Alright, so here's the issue:
Is the content that is allowed to leak into the title bar configurable by the user? For instance, could I only allow Tabs to be merged and keep the buttons outside the title bar?
If Yes: Now the dev has to figure out different ways to make the app look good for a bunch of weird configurations. For instance, in your mockup you have a three dot button on the first picture, but not on the second. If a user doesn't allow the 3 dot button to leak into the title bar, the dev has to place the function of that button elsewhere.
If no: You haven't solved anything, have you? This is just Firefox, which already exists. I can already control if Firefox uses CSD or not. What is the point here?
...yes, I agree with that, and that is why SSDs are superior. They allow the app developer to do whatever they want inside the app, while also making sure the window frame is consistent with the rest of the system.
It's like a gallery wall in a home, you can mix photos and paintings with varying styles, and they would still look like they fit together if you use the same frame style on them.
...I'm not sure what I'm looking at.
I'm not sure if you are suggesting Developers need to keep 4 different layouts in mind, or if I'm not getting the mockup.
I always thought Sync for Reddit looked cool, but never found myself comfortable with it because RIF existed, and I always felt more comfortable with it.
I'm now using Sync and it is pretty great, but in my case it required some UI fiddling. It looks like Material Design 3, but I feel there's something wrong with the default values for font and text size nothing that is unfixable, but just... Weird