BananaFlip

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Nah, unless you're unhappy with the current outcome, you can leave it as it is.

Changes in .config/gtk-4.0/gtk.css will be applied on top of the stylesheet, so whatever you don't override there, will fall back to the default, that's why your sidebar previously went full Adwaita light mode.

After taking a brief look at the libadwaita source, as far as I can see, helper colors are a special case anyways, @borders as well as border_coloris used exclusively in the scssfiles (which the gtk.css is generated from), whereas the gtk.css for some reason doesn't get back to the generic name, but uses the assigned value alpha(currentColor,0.15) - which doesn't help your case at all.

To actually change @borders, you would need to modify its value in .scss and regenerate the .css then.

For your other point, there's no need to introduce a new color for this, since the helper color is an alpha value derived from your foreground color (that's what currentColor is referring to), so if you change _fg_color in gtk.css, @borders will change along with it.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 months ago (3 children)

You're most certainly welcome.

I wanted to add on this, for anyone else stumbling across this post and struggling with sidebar theming: The above will work 90% of the time, but in case your some-random-theme.css overrides @sidebar_, or doesn't follow the naming convention to begin with, search your gtk.css for .sidebar-pane, which should be the actual css selector for @sidebar_, and .content-pane for @secondary-sidebar_.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (5 children)

Defining sidebar_bg_color does not work?

@define-color sidebar_bg_color 	
@define-color sidebar_fg_color 	
@define-color sidebar_backdrop_color 	
@define-color sidebar_border_color 	
@define-color sidebar_shade_color

@define-color secondary_sidebar_bg_color 	
@define-color secondary_sidebar_fg_color 	
@define-color secondary_sidebar_backdrop_color 	
@define-color secondary_sidebar_border_color 	
@define-color secondary_sidebar_shade_color

see libadwaita named colors

GTK Inspector comes with GTK, you don't need to install it.

Enable it with gsettings

gsettings get org.gtk.Settings.Debug enable-inspector-keybinding true

so you can invoke it either by running GTK_DEBUG=interactive application-name-here or, when alredy using the application, via Control + Shift + I/Control + Shift + D

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

:)

Thanks for encouraging my enthusiasm, I too think it's gorgeous (and supposed to arrive today, yay)!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yeah, I'm sure that's a change, but these fancy mellow dancer kicks on a compact board like this definitely have their charm for me. In general this board looks pretty fun and chill, hope it meets your expectations.

180 pivots were my first trick too, and, as a relatively slow learner, I was that proud, when I finally got to make them consistent at 180 degree.

After long back and forth, I decided to play safe and went with the Switch Muskrat (deck only).

I own one of their earlier cruiser boards (2018 maybe? A friend from Poland gave it to me back then) already, so no doubt here about quality, and above all, durability.

Usually riding shorter and more skinny boards myself, I'm still a bit intimated by its size though. Your "I think that the Chinchiller's length will make grab tricks like tiger claw or aeroflip harder to perform than with a longer board" is my "how should I be able to pop a tank like this more than 1cm high, let alone flip it?" But in the end, I'm quite positive both of us will adapt to our shiny new toys. Hopefully.

Yes, I'll make sure to leave a review here after I got some time with it (now, if only GLS could hurry up a bit..).

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

While it's not a feature of lemmy, you can if you absolutely need to, without being subscribed to a kbin instance.

See for yourself: Go here to see this very thread on kbin, scroll down and click on the "favourites" tab, it will show you precisely who voted how on your post and when. For comments, see hitagi's reply.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

Sweet, I dig the specs of the chinchiller, how do you like it for freestyle in particular?

I just ordered my very first freestyle longboard (this was solely skateboard terrain for me up to now) today and I'm beyond exited - but also more than skeptical about my ability to transfer my already dubious skill set to a board of much bigger size, but well, I digress..

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This won't work as expected, I don't think?

Unless you installed the developer edition, which uses a separate profile/path, both of your installs will use the ~/.mozilla directory, so configs and profile of your new install will interfere with the ESR version.

(and why did you symlink /opt/firefox/firefox to /usr/bin/firefox? The desktop file already takes care of recognition)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Not quite. Snowflake, just like every other bridge, is one step before. Broadly speaking, blocked user connects to snowflake-proxy --> snowflake-proxy forwards blocked user's traffic to an entry node. And that's about it.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

sounds like it turns your computer into a tor exit node?

Not at all. Snowflake belongs to the family of pluggable transports, and offers a connection to an entry node in the Tor Network. Just like a traditional bridge, with the advantage that the higher number of individual, constantly moving IP's makes blocking them by oppressive regimes more difficult.

It uses WebRTC to disguise the traffic as a real time peer to peer communication, like video/voice call.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks for bringing some attention to this.

To add to the OP, if on linux or macOS, you may want to consider running a standalone proxy. Contrary to the browser extension it allows more than one connection at the same time and is more beneficial to the tor network all around.

Setting up is more than trivial following the instructions linked above, meanwhile snowflake got packaged for Debian, Ubuntu and a few others as well.

For macOS users there's is a homebrew package available.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Go to https://kbin.social/d/aussie.zone and hit the subscribe button in the sidebar. That should work I'd guess?

Edit: Thinking about this, I might be wrong here, and it will just add their front page to your "subscribed" feed, maybe give it a try anyways and report the results.

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