Currently I run GNOME and I switch between dark and light modes back and forth a lot. Several mechanism have to employed to make a ubiquitous look across all applications and I wondered what would it be like in a DM-free environment. This post sheds some light– thanks!
In addition, I’d like to know what terminal emulator the author is using and how are modes handled for it. (Unless it’s all inside that Emacs, of course.)
spnw@emacs.ch - @jummo Ah yes, I cheated a bit by not showing my terminal emulator. I use st, which would require some hacking to make it work with this setup. I’m sure there are GTK terminal emulators that would just work. Also yeah, I do spend as much time as possible in Emacs, so it doesn’t bother me as much. :)
It’s so kind of you to go an extra mile for me!– thank you (-:
One option I thought about, but forgot to mention, is an xterm-compatible terminal and something like the following. Unfortunately, it wouldn’t work across all running instances of xterm.
Currently I run GNOME and I switch between dark and light modes back and forth a lot. Several mechanism have to employed to make a ubiquitous look across all applications and I wondered what would it be like in a DM-free environment. This post sheds some light– thanks!
In addition, I’d like to know what terminal emulator the author is using and how are modes handled for it. (Unless it’s all inside that Emacs, of course.)
https://emacs.ch/@spnw/112548641694993792
It’s so kind of you to go an extra mile for me!– thank you (-:
One option I thought about, but forgot to mention, is an xterm-compatible terminal and something like the following. Unfortunately, it wouldn’t work across all running instances of xterm.
xtermcontrol --fg=white --bg=black
I wonder if Firefox can respond to Xft property changes at runtime.