* Bob S. (usr@sanctum.com) [030715 22:39]:
OK, did that. That is when I saw changes in KDE.
For GTK1: Copy /usr/share/themes/QtCurve/gtk/gtkrc ...to either /etc/gtk/gtkrc To enable this theme for *all* users ...or ~/.gtkrc To enbale for just yourself.
Alternatively, edit ~/.gtkrc so that it looks like: include "/usr/share/themes/QtCurve/gtk/gtkrc"
Now, I am not sure if I have GTK or GTK-2.0. They both show up in /etc, but, when I edited the fonts in Mozilla, I used gnomecc which is part of GTK1 I believe. I assume because I do not get a change in the Gnome applications, is because I have to do both parts of your directions, KDE & GTK. In /etc/gtk/ there is no plain gtkrc. There are about a hundred of them with a .** extension. Looks like they are languages.
For GTK2: Copy /usr/share/themes/QtCurve/gtk-2.0/gtkrc ...to either /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc To enable this theme for *all* users ...or ~/.gtkrc-2.0 To enbale for just yourself.
Alternatively, edit ~/.gtkrc-2.0 so that it looks like: include "/usr/share/themes/QtCurve/gtk-2.0/gtkrc"
Don't have a gtkrc in gtk-2.0 Only two files in there
Good luck and I hope 8.2 starts behaving for you soon. It really is quite nice. It's a shame your having so many issues with it.
Thanks. I hope so too. I upgraded from 8.0 to 8.1 using apt and after solvingh some problems ended up with a really nice system. Figured I would pay my money to SuSE and do a fresh install. Can't believe all of these niggling little annoyances.
Sorry about that. Those instructions were for default compiles. I believe James did a specific SuSE compile the files your looking for are here... /opt/gnome2/share/themes/QtCurve/ /opt/gnome2/share/themes/Geramik/ I am truly sorry about that. The rest of the instructions hold true. You can copy the gtkrc's to the right places and it should work. I would just copy them to your home directory (ie. ~/) because unless you've got lots of users then putting them in the /etc/gtk directory really isn't needed since the only one who needs things to be global is yourself which is what putting them in /etc/gtk does..makes them able to be accessed globally. :) -- Ben Rosenberg ---===---===---===--- mailto:ben@whack.org ----------------------------------------------------------- This e-mail and any attachment is intended for anyone with an email address and does not contain information that is confidential and privileged or that is of any intrinsic value to anyone.