tomscharbach
Thanks!
FIX for dark themes with blaring white applications.
SOLUSfiddler I tried this but it's the same as budgie desktop settings and the same (all cousins) as gnome-control settings. Just a little more customized. Seems these programs exist to have the final say and cancel out each other. None of them fixed my nautilus font problems.
I am very wary of 'too many chiefs' here so I try to use just one (budgie desktop settings.)
2 cents here
Staudey perfect time to ask then cause I always wondered, and it's probably relevant:
in budgie desktop settings what is the 'use built in dark theme' tab?
if it's enabled what does it do? just display the default OOTB theme? why would it need to be disabled?
(I've toggled it wherever over the years and not noticed anything but wasn't looking either)
thanks
brent Those are two options "Built-in theme" and "Dark Theme". The first causes the panel and menu to be styled in Budgie's own theme (shipped with the package, hence "built-in") instead of whatever Widgets theme you choose. This built-in theme has recently been improved a lot by serebit.
The "Dark Theme" option causes some elements of Budgie like the menu, Budgie Desktop Settings itself and some apps (?) to be styled dark even though you have selected a light Widgets theme. You can try it with e.g. Materia or Arc (using the standard, non-Dark variant).
I am glad that this proved helpful to people.
brent SOLUSfiddler I tried this but it's the same as budgie desktop settings and the same (all cousins) as gnome-control settings. Just a little more customized. Seems these programs exist to have the final say and cancel out each other. None of them fixed my nautilus font problems.
I am very wary of 'too many chiefs' here so I try to use just one (budgie desktop settings.)
In reference to this comment: When I first encountered this problem I tried every single Gnome/Budgies related settings change to fix it. Nothing, absolutely nothing, worked FOR ME.
The dconf-editor fix worked instantly FOR ME. It required me to have a dark theme enabled. I haven't been active for some time @brent and I don't know exactly what has happened recently but if you (or anyone) need help on this issue I would be happy to assist if possible.
@Staudey thank you for the work you've done to address these issues (per the top pinned message). Since this issue affects Nautilus & GTK based systems I would like to share some fixes that would allow Dolphin (installed from flatpak
) to work.
If users would like to use Dolphin until the issues with Nautilus in Gnome/Budgie are fixed I advise them to use the flatpak
version. There are existing issues with theming that affect flatpak
installations of most software.
I've used this blog post from ItsFoss to solve this problem multiple times and it has always worked.
To sum the blog post up succinctly using Matcha-dark-sea (sudo eopkg it matcha-dark-sea
) as an example:
ls /usr/share/themes
- Matcha-dark-sea will be listed if installedmkdir ~/.themes
- This is a hidden directory in the home folder. May exist alreadycp /usr/share/themes/Matcha-dark-sea ~/.themes
sudo flatpak override --filesystem=$HOME/.themes
- give ALL flatpak packages permission to access ~/.themessudo flatpak override --env=GTK_THEME=Matcha-dark-sea
- give ALL flatpak applications Matcha-dark-sea theme
This will fix any theming issues on Dolphin AND ANY OTHER FLATPAK APP INSTALLED. Until the recent issues with GTK/Budgie/Gnome apps and theming are resolved this provides a solution so users can install apps from Flatpak that follow correct theming directives.
Hope this helps.
jrsilvey I don't know exactly what has happened recently
you saw the meme in the other thread. that's what happened.
Great resolution--I've never tried flatpak theming. always scared me for some reason (conflicts etc). but once you make a dark move in dconf, you can still undo it in gnome-control or budgie-control, right?
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brent I've never tried flatpak theming ...
I didn't know that Flatpak theming even existed. I've been hoping for a modular Linux OS for a long time. By modular, I mean that of the four layers (kernel, OS, DE, app), the OS layer would be minimal and the DE layer and app layer would consist of independent plug-ins along the lines of Flatpaks, each independent, self-contained and self-sufficient. I don't expect to see that happen, but it seems to me that a modular architecture would solve a lot of problems.
tomscharbach I meant that loosely with "flatpak theming" resembling a coaching or coordinating role regarding theming, not really actual theming. at least that was my takeaway with the stickied discussion workaround to this, as well as this. I was unclear for sure
tomscharbach I mean that of the four layers (kernel, OS, DE, app), the OS layer would be minimal and the DE layer and app layer would consist of independent plug-ins along the lines of Flatpaks, each independent, self-contained and self-sufficient
If there was an emoji of a blown mind then put it here. Far out, Tom.
jrsilvey
Hi,
thank you very much for giving us this solution!
It worked perfectly even though I don't like Dolphin's design as much but at least I can use my favourite theme Plata-Compact again!
Hooray!!
As much as I like Dolphin and its capabilities to stick to the OS's theming there is still one problem I need help with:
In Dolphin most allocations of file formats and their respectable apps aren't there (as they are in Nautilus). They are set within Solus (Budgie in my case) but not within the file manager.
When right-clicking a file to pick the desired app I want to open the file with I have to enter the linux-typical path to the place on my computer where all the applications are stored.
Could you help me with how that's done within Dolphin?
Something like the Nautilus-typical right-click and a graphical list of selectable apps pops up doesn't exist in Dolphin.
- Edited
Is this what you are talking about and its missing?
I dont use dolphin but this tells about dolphin didnt see much about that tho.
https://opensource.com/life/15/8/comprehensive-guide-dolphin-file-manager
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SOLUSfiddler I think your prob right something with flatpak.
I dunno if you installed flatseal and look at the settings for dolphin you could change access
(Dunno just throwing that out there)
When I click on a file's properties Dolphin shows a wrong app to open it with.
I can then click on "Change..." (or whatever it is in English, I'm using the German UI) and I get:
"Could not find the "keditfiletype5" executable in PATH."
Does that get us anywhere towards a solution?
- Edited
This is prob what you ran into
https://github.com/flathub/org.kde.dolphin/issues/57
Appears its not fixed.
what version flat you got
This is the latest from flathub October 13, 2022 Version 22.08.2
https://flathub.org/apps/details/org.kde.dolphin
If that dont work its prob fubar.
SOLUSfiddler Everyday is like Halloween with Dolphin's Baloo indexer on budgie. It's not too late to remove it.
/