- Renamed themes:
- "colorful" to "default" and "colorful_dark" to "default_dark"
- "default" to "monochrome" and "default_dark" to "monochrome_dark"
- "colorful_midnight_blue" to "qdarkstyle_midnight_blue"
- "qdarkstyle_midnight_blue" to "qdarkstyle_midnight_blue_monochrome"
- qdarkstyle is renamed from "Dark" to "Mine Shaft" in the UI
- default and monochrome themes all use the same qss stylesheet
- Remove the ability to select "default_dark" directly
- Add "qdarkstyle_monochrome" theme
- Remove duplicated icon files
colorful theme has been default theme for awhile. having colorful theme
try and grab icons from other theme doesn't work on Linux.
Also adding two additional icons, info is to hint to the user that they
should hit verify after pasting in a token, sync is to show that the
verification is occurring.
I've seen some comments stating that sharing pre-compiled packages
of yuzu is problematic for linux distributions due to some contents
having license of CC BY-ND 3.0
Better licensed sources of icons have been found for most cases,
see the changes to the .reuse/dep5 file for details.
Placeholders for connected/disconnected icons
At the time of writing I consider these icons to be placeholders,
hence three copies. colorful is grey, default is black, qdarkstyle is white
connected is gnome/16x16/network-idle.png with no changes
connected_notification is gnome/16x16/network-error.png with changes
disconnected is gnome/16x16/network-offline.png with changes
Looking at licenses: GNOME icon theme is distributed under the terms of either
GNU LGPL v.3 or Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.
Debian appears to explicitly state they're licensing under
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
From a tarball at the following link suggests we can just attribute GNOME Project
https://download.gnome.org/sources/gnome-icon-theme/
When attributing the artwork, using "GNOME Project" is enough.
Please link to http://www.gnome.org where available.
CC-BY-SA-3.0.txt from https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode.txt
yuzu's default theme doesn't specify everything, which is fine for
windows, but in linux anything unspecified is set to the users theme.
Symptoms of this are that a linux user with a dark theme won't think
to change the theme to a dark theme when first using yuzu
Idea here is to try and support arbitrary themes on linux.
preliminary work on a "default_dark" theme, used only as overlay
for any themes that are measured to be dark mode.
Other work done:
FreeDesktop standard icon names:
plus -> list-add
delete refresh, we use view-refresh
remove duplicated icons for qdarkstyle_midnight_blue
referencing icon aliases in the qrc files is the way to go
Note:
Dynamic style changing doesn't appear to work with AppImage
Turns out that for Qt to properly handle plurals in English a
translation needs to be provided, otherwise the user is left with
messages such as "Building: 2 shader(s)"
Plurals for other all other languages are handled on transifex.
I wrote the README.md to just refer to it as a translation
collaboration site just in case we ever switch.
These translations being out of date won't pose any technical problems
so I believe it is fine to handle them manually on a "best effort"
basis.
The files are generated into the source directory so that the
relative filenames are correct. The generated file is added to
.gitignore
[REUSE] is a specification that aims at making file copyright
information consistent, so that it can be both human and machine
readable. It basically requires that all files have a header containing
copyright and licensing information. When this isn't possible, like
when dealing with binary assets, generated files or embedded third-party
dependencies, it is permitted to insert copyright information in the
`.reuse/dep5` file.
Oh, and it also requires that all the licenses used in the project are
present in the `LICENSES` folder, that's why the diff is so huge.
This can be done automatically with `reuse download --all`.
The `reuse` tool also contains a handy subcommand that analyzes the
project and tells whether or not the project is (still) compliant,
`reuse lint`.
Following REUSE has a few advantages over the current approach:
- Copyright information is easy to access for users / downstream
- Files like `dist/license.md` do not need to exist anymore, as
`.reuse/dep5` is used instead
- `reuse lint` makes it easy to ensure that copyright information of
files like binary assets / images is always accurate and up to date
To add copyright information of files that didn't have it I looked up
who committed what and when, for each file. As yuzu contributors do not
have to sign a CLA or similar I couldn't assume that copyright ownership
was of the "yuzu Emulator Project", so I used the name and/or email of
the commit author instead.
[REUSE]: https://reuse.software
Follow-up to 01cf05bc75