It is the Qt6 gui framework there control if the gui is in light or dark mode based on the system setting.
Shotcut have no control over it, in qt5 it was possible to select themes from the application.
The options in your screenshot are only available to me if high contrast mode is turned off and standard dark mode is turned on. And most of the apps/software that I use daily do not display dark themes unless high contrast mode is on. Dark mode and high contrast mode are two different groups of system settings. Having to constantly switch between dark mode and high contrast mode is annoying.
Hi, I am a total beginner at Linux (and XFCE), having only recently installed it last week. I really like the general look and fell of Windows 7, and have managed to customise everything (panel, desktop, icons, sounds, etc...) but not the whiskermenu plugin. I dont need it to look exactly like the windows 7 one, I just want the colours, although a full menu theme would he great. Any help?
There's no way to change those special folders currently, as they're rendered by the Windows shell which doesn't expose any methods to change its colors. (We have an option to make it change the background color, but the text will still be black if you use that, so it's no use with inverted themes.)
I can only find dark and light theme on anki desktop.
Ankidroid has four themes Light, Plain, Dark and Black. I use Black theme on Amoled screen.
When I view cards on desktop it does not feel consistent.
Please include Black theme or guide me to setting if it already has.
I have explored this extensively and checked on windows forums and there is no way to do a direct port of this as of right now. It has to be done by hand. Perhaps a developer could write a shell script or program that could automatically make these conversions (which probably wouldn't be too hard on the Linux side of things because of the standardized format of icon themes).
Currently I'm doing this by hand with a Windows app called Icon Packager by Stardock. How to handle windows part I am unsure as I am not a windows developer. I think it could probably be done for a lot of applications using shell scripts and regedit though... hmmmm perhaps.
This link might also be useful if anyone else decides to take up this project. I'm considering doing it myself but I have a few other priorities to finish up first. -us/windows/desktop/shell/how-to-assign-a-custom-icon-to-a-file-type
Yep, I did that just before I made my original post. I figured I'd also see what the Mac community had to say - to see if it was an idea others liked as well, and also to get feedback (in case I was just plain ingnorant) and there was a way to change themes I didn't know about, or some third party theming utilities like Window Blinds or something out there.
If Apple implemented the themes and customization parameters, then it's fairly certain that it would not adversely effect stability. Personally I'm not interested in elaborate things like a transluscent zebra skin UI, but just a few color scheme options and configurations beyond what's currently available.
The one big thing I notice about OS X is that even though it is a Graphical User Interface there are much less user options on how to change/customize that GUI then there are in any version of Windows. And for some normal settings, like not having the Help Window "Always On Top" of all other windows, "Show All Files" and others you have to use terminal and type in a command to change those common settings.
You can brighten up your Windows 11 desktop with the so-called themes. These are unified combinations of background image(s), colors for the various interface elements (like the taskbar and title bar), new sound files, and changes to the mouse pointer and other elements, all enabled at once with the click of a button.
We recently had this issue on one of our servers. We found a simple way to resolve this issue that avoids having to delete folder or change the file system permissions. In an administrative command prompt, run "SFC /scannow" and "DISM /online /cleanup-image /resorehealth". These commands check the hashes of the files in the C:\Windows directory to confirm that all of the files are not corrupt. They will notice that the windows basic theme has been changed and will replace it with the correct version from Windows Update servers (or your WSUS server if you have it implemented).
I have defined the policy to load aero, deleted and replaced the accessibility profiles with regular aero, and deleted the vso folder on all servers. It seems to affect all users. Ive replaced the themes with good, no corrupted themes, but I cant seem to fix this with registry and gpo.
In my GPO, I have prevented users from changing themes, in fact they cant even personalize, Ive created a policy that loads Aero theme, Ive removed the accessibility and high contrast themes from the servers, Grabbed a fresh Aero theme from a new 2016 build.
Copy the default theme (C:\Windows\Resources\Themes\aero.theme) and replace the high contrast themes with the default. You'll need to take ownership of the folder (C:\Windows\Resources\Ease of Access Themes) first.
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