From 8b6a248a8cfa4e376a8ebb546694300d159b8237 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Robby Workman Date: Sun, 8 May 2011 22:57:28 -0500 Subject: desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2: Fixed README No need for the gtkrc confusion any more... Signed-off-by: Robby Workman --- desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2/README | 7 ------- 1 file changed, 7 deletions(-) (limited to 'desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2') diff --git a/desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2/README b/desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2/README index 1d1a2d80a2..5e923ea8f5 100644 --- a/desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2/README +++ b/desktop/QtCurve-Gtk2/README @@ -7,13 +7,6 @@ If you want Gtk2 apps to use the theme system wide, create a symbolic link to the new theme like this: ln -s /usr/share/themes/QtCurve/gtk-2.0/gtkrc /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc -Note that in Slackware 13.1, KDE and GTK assume different things. The GTK+2 -package is compiled to use /etc/gtk-2.0/*-slackware-linux/gtkrc, while KDE -is hardcoded to look in /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc. Consequently, you will probably -want to put your preferred gtkrc in the GTK path, and then put a symlink to -it at /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc for KDE to use (or vice versa - either will work). -Alternatively, gtk-chtheme works fine on a per user basis. - If you are using a dark theme, and fonts in Firefox are unreadable because it does not invert the colors, you can pass USERCHROME=no to the script, which will disable the modification of userchrome.css in Firefox. -- cgit v1.2.3