![]() ![]() I tested with LO Writer and sure enough, after an app re-start, Writer’s gui reflected these settings. In my case neither file existed, so I created /etc/gtk-3.0 and, to experiment, put the following in it (also from the above web page): I installed libreoffice-gtk3 as suggested by the installation Help->About LibreOffice reported that the VCL is now gtk3.Īccording to the ArchLinux page on GTK, look and feel settings have to be defined in /etc/gtk-3.0/settings.ini for all users and $HOME/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini for individual users. I am now able to modify the gui font (and whole look and feel for that matter). No yellow font color select, what to make it white background color back and yellow fonts working Normal is dark theme is within the toolbars and not the background sheet. I’ll apologize in advance that it will probably take me a few days due to the fact that I’ll be changing residences shortly. I made it work installing GTK’s with synaptics Now dark background. I will attempt to install and configure libreoffice-gtk3 and report on the results. We will explain it in two steps a) Windows and b) Linux. Locale: en-US (en_US.UTF-8) Calc: group threaded Help->About Libreoffice confirms what’s plain to see: “pretty ancient Windows like look’n feel”ĬPU threads: 8 OS: Linux 4.19 UI render: default VCL: x11 Maybe that could be achieved, but it wouldn’t be high on my priority list, as I am just as likely to replace Fluxbox with a different wm. Re: Fluxbox - as far as I can tell, Fluxbox supports gtk and kde apps but does not interact with their configurations as such. Thank you and for your comments and replies. Therefore it should be up to you, which VCL you want to use. It has support for KDE and Gnome applications. Xdefaults, but the times requiring to fiddle with such settings are gone and the how-to details left my brain long time ago)īTW: That’s one of the reasons to add information from Help -> About LibreOffice on any question, since it tells the reader, which VCL you are using and will avoid to ask back.Ĭhecked Debian site for Fluxbox and it states. But: I got no experience with Fluxbox, hence I can’t tell whether kf5 or gtk3 could be hooked in (Changing X11 default fonts for applications should be possible via. If you want your LibreOffice to look like the same as any other GTK application on Debian, install package libreoffice-gtk3 using sudo apt install libreoffice-gtk3 -y. GTK gtk3 (which would be standard on Debian).generic x11 ( which you obviously are using, aka “ pretty ancient Windows like look’n feel” -)).Standard elements (like menus) rely on a Visual Class Library (VCL) and on Linux there are 3 of 'em (leaving off counting various sub-versions existing in earlier version of LibreOffice) Approximately 25% are students and 10% are Linux users the latter usually find LibreOffice part of their preferred distribution.Yes, but its not font only rather than the complete look & feel including font settings. The Document Foundation estimates that there are 200 million active LibreOffice users worldwide. In 2015, the project claimed 120 million unique downloading addresses from May 2011 to May 2015, excluding Linux distributions, with 55 million of those being from May 2014 to May 2015. ![]() In the nine months between January 2011 (the first stable release) and October 2011, LibreOffice was downloaded about 7.5 million times. The project was announced, and a beta was released on September 28, 2010. It is the most actively developed free and open-source office suite, with approximately 50 times the development activity of Apache OpenOffice, the other major descendant of, in 2015. LibreOffice Online is an online office suite that includes the applications Writer, Calc, and Impress and provides an upstream for projects such as commercial Collabora Online. LibreOffice is the default office suite of the most popular Linux distributions. Ecosystem partner Collabora uses LibreOffice upstream code and provides apps for Android, iOS, iPadOS and ChromeOS. LibreOffice is available for a variety of computing platforms, with official support for Microsoft Windows, macOS and Linux and community builds for many other platforms. If there isnt a problem to change colors of Calligra Suite interface (just system colors do it), there is serious problem with changing colors of 'paper' (just for screen, not for print). To work on computer I must white text on black (dark) screen (and dark theme too). LibreOffice uses the OpenDocument standard as its native file format but supports formats of most other major office suites, including Microsoft Office, through a variety of import and export filters. Im one of those who have a serious problem with my eyes. ![]()
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