The active non active problem?

Well one of the configuration options in kwin for the longest time was color...
I know that i have know that for the longest time it made sense for the longest, time and i gess it still does .
But oxygen started with a new idea a all in one look a unified look, and that poses a problem how does one set an active from an inactive window apart.
After some work it was decided that this was enough....

Now some users think we should color the windeco. Well In all true honesty I cant see how I can do that, and still be coherent with the style, its an ok option but its not oxygen.

The first time I saw oxygen style was wen Kenneth made a rendering for me of a ceramic slab with rounded corners, that is the ground basis of oxygen, as a mater of fact I'm willing to change most of oxygen except that cause its the foundation of oxygen. What I'm going to redo is the windeco buttons and had a bit of color to them so that will help as well in setting them apart.

Any way what is your opinion on this?

Comments

Anonymous said…
Perhaps a small subtle border around the active window (like in active buttons) using the theme colors is elegant.

I 'm afraid that the drop shadow alone (btw, will it work without composite enabled?) is not sufficient when a small active window is over --and fully inside-- a larger inactive window. It seems like a part of it.
The colored window buttons idea seems nice for this purpose.

For me, you all have done a very nice work, but still needs a little refinement to be perfect in all terms (style, usability,...).
Anonymous said…
Its not just the dropshadow, thre are a couple more difrences.
The windeco butons fade off, the text 2, and the dividing line disapears.

Btw thre is an option in kcm that makes the colors of the window change in active vs inactive mode.
Anonymous said…
Hi. We cannot argue that users have grown used to different colour titlebar being active so you could experiment with that, it doesn't need to be entirely coloured, maybe a non-linear gradient under the buttons or something, but some sort of coloured hint (except for text) should exist, IMHO.
Anonymous said…
I did stop using Oxygen because of that problem (on dual screen, with several open windows, it was hard to quickly find the active window), and because of the lack of buttons (stick, shade, ontop/bottom).
I hope next Oxygen version will be as productive as it is already beautifull! ('productive'=make live easier).
Once those 2 points will have been fixed, I will happily drop Plastik! :)
The fade out to gray and hidden line help a lot already :)

I also like the Mac OS effect of adding some color to the window buttons, but I'm not sure that would look good with Oxygen though.
Anonymous said…
Yeap im thinking on redoing the windeco butons, probaly in the line of the new solution for progressbars and scrollbars.
that way the difrence will be more obvius.
Anonymous said…
[...]What I'm going to redo is the windeco buttons and had a bit of color to them so that will help as well in setting them apart.[...]

Nuno, while you are at it, could you also make those buttons square, or square with rounded corners? Somehow the current -round- buttons don't mix up with the rest of the style at all.

At the very least they could be done a bit more flat. The current ones look like thumbtacks.
Anonymous said…
Nuno, while you are at it, could you also make those buttons square, or square with rounded corners? Somehow the current -round- buttons don't mix up with the rest of the style at all.

I must agree with this, the buttons really don't mix well, again IMHO.

In other news: my captcha for this post almost spelled a curse word in croatian, not that's nice. :-D
Anonymous said…
Would it be possible to make inactive windows completly gray or something like that ? Not only the windeco but the whole window. Maybe making it loose its gradient ?
Anonymous said…
[...]The windeco butons fade off, the text 2, and the dividing line disapears.[...]

Just fadding the windeco is not enough, IMO. Any whindow in the background could be rendered in subdued hues (I mean all of its surface: dim text, flat controls, desaturated images...). Differences in color saturation and texture detail are actually two of the more important cues that the human brain uses to tell objects apart in a 3D world (the other one being stereoscopic vision).

Now, I don't know if something like this could be done in a QT style, nor whether it'd belong to the toolkit itself, or rather, to the window manager.
Anonymous said…
Could you post a screenshot without KWin's compositing? That's really my only big concern with the active/inactive scheme in Oxygen. It looks great with compositing enabled, but differentiating between active and inactive when there aren't any shadows can be a bit tricky.
Anonymous said…
benard that is alrady possible in kcm :)
Unknown said…
Isn't there a way to hide the windeco buttons at all when the window is inactive? Or fade them much more...
Anonymous said…
Hey...

What about making the window borders of inactive windows somelike transparent with highlighting the text/title? Cristalclear transparent borders would increase the usability imo, because you can easily find the active window with no transparent borders. Also it would be logical too as an inactive window is less visible.

What do you think?


BTW: I like the round buttons, it is very oxygen-unique and stylish, too.
Anonymous said…
georg that one idea I like :)
Anonymous said…
Can someone do a mockup of how colorizing should work with this windeco? I tried once with gimp and the result was "ugly"; maybe it needs different gradient for colorizing and extended separator line you can see in the middle of the titlebar?
Anonymous said…
Benard, as Nuno said

just go into systemsettings and the appearance, colors part, effects tab and play with the settings for inactive.

This works for non-composite too :)
Anonymous said…
burke 2 problems....
1 depends on hardware acel (witch we need badly for alot of other problems btw )
2 not sure it would look very good and completly coerent. Dough its not the worst idea. And i would be wiling to try.
Anonymous said…
@k that is the main problem I cant see it. its impossible to look good in my opinion.
I keep closing Firefox with a Ctrl-w rather than switch tab in gvim (with a Ctrl-w) because I keep getting confused which is the active window. This is much easier to do when you have a dual screen display, so there can be no other cues to work from.

I think the style needs something clearer.
Ivan Čukić said…
I don't think there aren't enough inactive hints:
- inactive window effects that change the color of a whole window
- fading the decoration buttons
- lighter window caption
and those are all available without compositing...

Cheers!

p.s. a bit off topic, but could you update the default Plasma theme (in SVN) to support different look for differently placed panels?
Anonymous said…
rchard call me stupid if you will but heeeee wy dont you use the mouse?
Honestly I never seteled a difrence at all betwin active an inactive couse I use the mouse and using the mouse there is no such problem.
But im wiling to make alteratons, since they dont force me to put colors on the windeco ditching the intire concep.
Anonymous said…
First I want to say that you and the other oxygen artists did an excellent job. I like oxygen very much and there are only few thing that need to be improved, especially in non-composite mode.
In composite mode there is the possibility to darken the background, so you can see which window is active, but in non-composite I didn't find an option. It would be great if in non-composite a blue halo would surround the window like in active buttons like ioannis suggested. The problem with a grey shadow is that you can overlook it, because it look to simmer to the windows, especially if you have a dark color scheme.
I think that is the main problem. A few other things that are a little bit problematic are for example the expanded comboboxes which do not have the same quality like the rest of oxygen, but I think thats also a non-composition issue.
Last question, ist this still something we can look forward to see it somethimes?

Again, thaks very much for your work.
Anonymous said…
sorry, forgot the link
http://www.nuno-icons.com/images/estilo/rect6430.png
Anonymous said…
I thing tampering with the inactive windows is not that effective to make the active window stand out.You shouldn't search which windows are inactive to determine the active one.

Another point that has been mentioned is the lack of color distinction, that is very important. As I see it, the basis of the window separation is grayscale alterations, that are unnoticeable with real windows (with colored contents). Could you try posting some screenshots-mockups that use real window contents, e.g. a web page? It will show better the problem in spotting the decoration differentiation.
Anonymous said…
What about a slim glow in color of the active window?
Anonymous said…
ivan čukić and most of them alrady optional on oxygen.

the other problem I did not get it sorry:)
Anonymous said…
I see.
I additionally thought oxygen(02) is something very clear and transparent and therefore it would fit to KDE's oxygen.

BTW: When I see the way of making the windows transparent I often see them faded out a bit which look sometimes a bit like dust, which would not very fit for oxygen. I always assosiate KDE4 with pure nature and nature with freedom(which is the reason why it gives me personally a special feeling and making me more relaxed every time I use KDE4). And since oxygen is very natural imo it would be better to have a look which reminds of sitting on the shores of a calm sea in a forrest, breathing fresh air - and not of working in the industrial area of a megacity ;-)

Anyway. Maybe there's a way of making transparency possible by not using hw-acceleration. Perhabs in the way of making the menus in KDE3 transparent, at least if no acceleration is available on the given system.

And perhabs one could increase coherency by making more elements of the design transparent. Also there are different kinds of transparency and everything related I think. I'm sure one could find a way which fits. Usability would profit from that imo.
Anonymous said…
I've been having red borders on my windows for a while in KDE 3, which works really well and looks nice (IMHO), and I reckon the oxygen windec could be drawn with a tint to the edges of the window, and look pretty good.

I'd steer clear of removing the buttons completely from inactive windows, since I often want to minimize, maximize or close windows which aren't active.
Anonymous said…
I did a quick mockup from what I meant before
http://www.bilder-hochladen.net/files/66q2-1-png.html
Anonymous said…
I did some quick cut/paste in gimp to illustrate my thoughts on how you could make colorize happen (extend the middle titlebar separator to edges completely, instead of fading out towards left/right frame) - I think this should satisfy most users who demand colorization of active window, what you think?
http://i29.tinypic.com/200d76c.jpg
Anonymous said…
At 5:51 AM, Blogger k said...
Can someone do a mockup of how colorizing should work with this windeco?


http://bugs.kde.org/attachment.cgi?id=24084&action=view has a screenshot with Wonton Soup colors, and that's actually not a mockup but it's for real from a patch.
Autumn Autist said…
well, I think you make the inactive window (all the inactive window) have a spice (like 10% more of sepia) over the active color. Like the active is new (and normaly saturated) and the active is older. Like a new/old paper...

the mouse could change colors in the same way

problems:
- if the main color is sepia then you must go to grayscale(something)

overall, I believe that oxygen approach is correct, maybe the implementation if rough... maybe you could reduce the inactive windows contrast?

Um abraço amigao
Anonymous said…
Hi,

In my opinion, the style + windeco are really nice, but I always have problems recognizing which window is active.

Maybe you can introduce colors which nicely blend with the rest of the style, like more gray for active and even less gray for inactive. Or if the user has for example blue-color scheme, let them choose blue active windeco and gray for inactive
?

A bit off topic:
Are you guys (Oxygen team) are going to make the style to be exactly the same as your previous mockup? I really like the scrollbar, progressbar and button styles :) You guys rock!
Anonymous said…
I love all these great ideas how to improve the theme even more.

I made a mockup by myself, too.

http://img246.imageshack.us/img246/2551/oxygentm7.png

slightly off topic:
Im trying to do a theme for the plasma contest but i fail at one point. How do I cut the SVG into smaller tiles/parts? like top, right, bottom etc.
Anonymous said…
How about changing the shape of the window? Is it possible for Oxygen to manipulate this? Just thought of frizzy window borders, but haven't really visualized it yet.
Anonymous said…
@teezee

You can draw a rectangle for each part of image (for example top, left, corner, etc) and select rectangle and image and make intersection (in path menu).

Hope you,ll understand my english :)
Anonymous said…
@teezee: another possibility would be to change the light grey to dark grey gradient with color to darg grey for an active window
Anonymous said…
@teezee sory dont like it feals unatural
about plasma juts make each part into a group and name it correctly.
think html wya of making images with the bonus that you can stretch or tile the sides.
Unknown said…
Different shades for the entire slab. Slightly darker grey for active, lighter for inactive. Stays true the the vision while offering a visual clue quickly.
Anonymous said…
you can vote for the colorization on http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=152030
Anonymous said…
Doesn't OSX grey out whole inactive windows along with the windeco buttons? That seems sufficient there.

Just in case there is some sample bias because the people who find this to be a problem are likelier to put the effort into commenting, I'll say that I personally have no trouble finding the active window and don't find the proposed colorful solutions attractive. Of course, I only have one monitor and perhaps rely on the taskbar more than other people do.
Anonymous said…
I believe the main problem is that while there are many options available (Ivan listed them above; Nuno, you misunderstood Ivan, he is saying that your style is perfect and that it offers all necessaryt options), they are not set as default. Most users are not aware of these options or unable to properly set them. (Also, most of those who posted here are not actually reading the other comments.) Just apply them as default when composite is off and we will not have this discussion any more.

The colorized mockups are hideous and don't fit the style at all.
Anonymous said…
Nuno,

First, you misunderstood Ivan. He wrote that the style is perfect and offers all necessary options. I agree.

Second, only those users who don't use compositing seem to have problems with distinguishing active and inactive windows. Please don't make the style worse for those who use compositing, it is really beautiful.

Third, since it seems that is is difficult to discover or to set those options that aid users who disable compositing, you should make them default. Either for all or only in case of disabled compositing. I believe that if you do this, the whole discussion will disappear (or at least become less relevant).

Fourth, all mockups that are colorized look hideous and simply don't fit the oxygen style. The only idea I found good was fading the windeco buttons. This is compatible to oxygen and could make what is possible already even more clear.

Keep up the great work!

mutlu
Anonymous said…
I like the current solution(KDE 3.5) - a different color title bar. Very easy to recognize which window is active.

Another problem is that the gray color is given to inactive windows - and if the active window is gray, it will cause even more confusion IMO.
Anonymous said…
@binnyva but can you honestly say that it is doable in oxygen. without braking the intire concept?
There are 3 main gradients in oxygen if we put a diferent color in the windeco the gardients dont make any sence and we beter but the background with a solid color... but then its not oxygen, its somthing else.
Anonymous said…
What about glowing LEDS in the title bar?
Like
http://www.rsc.org/images/b610111a-300-FOR%20TRIDION_tcm18-68696.jpg
http://shinyautos.com/shop/images/ph_gearknob-plasma-all%5B1%5D.jpg

Well, not that big, bug let's say the Plasma windeco is partly transparent (mostly opaque) and contains LEDs in it, so we only see the lights of LEDs and not the LEDs in themwelves. And the light is glowing because of the really-low transparency of the window material.
Dread Knight said…
Glowing LEDs sounds great!
It will be better than on MAC where all buttons are round without symbols.
Anonymous said…
Nice idea...
Dough im searching for a solution for the progress/scroll bar 2 and that dosent do it, I'm not very into inserting yet another visual element into the style.

Any way we will keep working on oxygen. Some in other in other solutions and that is what makes us great.
Ivan Čukić said…
Yes, that *was* my point - that enough differences exist, if the user wants them.

Concerning the p.s. I will quote myself: "Plasma now supports different looks for panels depending on the screen edge where the panel is located..."
http://ivan.fomentgroup.org/blog/2008/03/23/theme-contest-and-new-features/

I wanted to bother you on IRC for this, but you're always away :)
Anonymous said…
Ivan bug me bug me well best time is afterrnons, any way im gooing to the plasma metting so we can possibly meet.
Anonymous said…
>>Dough im searching for a solution for the progress/scroll bar 2<<

AAAAAHHHHH!!! Seriously, if you can polish those, i'll put you on a pedestal myself, worship you and chant for at least a month or so.
Anonymous said…
It should let you change the colour of the title bar. Simple as that. It can default to grey, but if the user wants a colour, they should be able to configure it. Preventing the user from configuring things is the Microsoft way of doing things. We use KDE (or Linux) because we like to be in control. Besides, making the title bars grey like this is a case of style over usability.

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