<p><br>
Le 24 juil. 2011 14:35, "Aurélien Gâteau" <<a href="mailto:agateau@kde.org">agateau@kde.org</a>> a écrit :<br>
> Le 24/07/2011 12:55, Giovanni Campagna a écrit :<br>
>> Which is a KDE bug. You should use GNOME shortcuts when possible. I<br>
>> mean, Gtk has emacs and Mac OS modes for keybindings, I doubt Qt hasn't<br>
>> something similar.<br>
> <br>
> <br>
>> It is true that you can change KDE theme without changing the GTK one,<br>
>> but why would one want that? I want the look and feel of my system to be<br>
>> consistent, even when different apps or toolkits are used, and I want<br>
>> one place to configure the theme.<br>
>> (or none, if I'm using GNOME3 </rant>)<br>
> <br>
> <br>
>> KDE apps under GNOME should use gnome-keyring, not kwallet: that's what<br>
>> org.freedesktop.Secrets is for.<br>
> <br>
> <br>
> What about the other way around BTW? Do GNOME applications running on a<br>
> KDE workspace follow KDE keybindings, theme, palette, fonts and icon<br>
> theme? Do they use kwallet instead of gnome-keyring? If they don't I<br>
> guess there is also a use for running GNOME System Settings on a KDE<br>
> workspace.</p>
<p>Well, I wrote xsettings-kde <a href="http://svn.mandriva.com/viewvc/soft/theme/xsettings-kde/">http://svn.mandriva.com/viewvc/soft/theme/xsettings-kde/</a> in 2007 which exports kde settings as xsettings and causes GNOME/GTK applications to follow KDE settings. Unfortunately, this code has never been integrated in KDE...</p>
<p>-- <br>
Frédéric Crozat </p>