This section describes:
How Style Manager sets display colors.
Resources used by Style Manager to control desktop color usage.
A palette consists a group of color sets. The color sets for the current palette are shown in the Style Manager Color dialog box
A file exists for each palette. The paletteDirectories resource specifies the directories containing palette files. By default, this resource contains:
Built-in palettes: /usr/dt/palettes
System-wide palettes: /etc/dt/palettes
Personal palettes: HomeDirectory/.dt/palettes
Each color set in the current palette is represented by a color button in the Style Manager Color dialog box. Each color is identified by a color set ID--a number from 1 to 8.
Each color set is composed of up to five colors. Each color button displays the background color of the color set. The five colors in each color set represent the following display component resources:
foreground--the foreground of an application window or window frame. It is always black or white. This is generally used for text within windows and titles.
background--the background of the application or the window frame.
topShadowColor--the color of the top and left bevels of application controls (such as push buttons) and window frames.
bottomShadowColor--the color of the bottom and right bevels of application controls and window frames.
selectColor--the color that indicates the active state of certain controls, such as active toggles and buttons.
The number of color sets used by each palette is determined by the colorUse resource, which the user can set using the Style Manager Number of Colors To Use dialog box.
Style Manager uses RGB values when writing color information to its palette files. The syntax for RGB numbers is:
#RedGreenBlue
Red, Green, and Blue are hexadecimal numbers, each 1 to 4 digits long, that indicate the amount of that color used. There must be the same number of digits for each of the colors. Thus, valid color values consist of 3, 6, 9, or 12 hexadecimal digits.
For example, white can be specified in any of the following ways:
#fff #ffffff #fffffffff #fffffffffffff
If you set a color resource directly, you can use either the color name or RGB value. The file /usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt lists all the named colors.
The desktop maps color sets to various display elements through resources and makes the assignments shown in Table 17-5.
Table 17-5 Mapped Color Sets to Resources
Resource |
Display element |
---|---|
Application's menu bar, menus, and dialog boxes |
These resources take a color set ID as their value. Coloring display elements with color set IDs allows the element to dynamically change to the new color scheme when a new palette is selected with Style Manager.
You can use these resources for individual applications. For example, the following line shows how you would visually group all dtterm windows by using color set 8 for their primary color.
dtterm*primaryColorSetId: 8
The color set IDs used for display elements depend on the Number of Colors setting in Style Manager:
Table 17-6 shows the color set IDs for high color (8 color sets)--Style Manager setting More Colors for Desktop.
Table 17-6 High color
Color set ID |
Display element |
---|---|
1 |
Active window frame color |
2 |
Inactive window frame color |
3 |
Unused (by default) |
4 |
Text entry areas |
5 |
Application's main background areas |
6 |
Application's menu bar, menus, and dialog boxes |
7 |
Unused by default |
8 |
Front Panel background |
Table 17-7 shows the color set IDs for medium color (4 color sets)--Style Manager setting More Colors for Applications.
Table 17-7 Medium color
Color set ID |
Display element |
---|---|
1 |
Active window frame color |
2 |
Inactive window frame color |
3 |
Application and Front Panel background color |
4 |
Text entry areas |
Table 17-8 shows the color IDs for low color (2 color sets)--Style Manager setting Most Colors for Applications.
Table 17-8 Low color
Color set ID |
Display element |
---|---|
1 |
Active window frame, workspace selection buttons |
2 |
All other display elements |
You can dynamically change color for desktop applications and other cooperating applications through Style Manager. The foreground and background colors set by Style Manager are available to non-cooperating applications.
For a client to respond to Style Manager color changes, the client must be using the desktop Motif library. Clients written with other toolkits cannot change color dynamically in response to Style Manager changes. Color changes for these clients do not take effect until the client is restarted.
There must be no other specific color resources applied for the client. This includes user-specified resources, appdefaults, and resources built into the application.
Clients can specify primaryColorSetId and secondaryColorSetId resources to use certain colors within a desktop palette.
The number of colors used by Style Manager depends on the values for the following resources:
colorUse--configures the number of colors the desktop uses
shadowPixmaps--directs the desktop to replace the two shadow colors with pixmaps
foregroundColor--specifies if the foreground color changes dynamically
dynamicColor--controls whether applications change color when you switch palettes
Table 17-9 lists the maximum number of colors allocated by the desktop.
Table 17-9 Number of Desktop Colors
Display |
Maximum Number of Colors |
Number Derived From |
---|---|---|
B_W |
2 |
Black and white |
LOW_COLOR |
12 |
Two color sets times five colors plus black and white |
MEDIUM_COLOR |
22 |
Four color sets times five colors plus black and white |
HIGH_COLOR |
42 |
Eight color sets times five colors plus black and white |
To determine the maximum number of colors:
Multiply the number of color sets in the palette by the number of colors within each color set.
Add 2 (for black and white).
However, with the following configuration you would only have ten colors in your palette: four color sets times two colors in each set (background and selectColor) plus black and white:
*colorUse: MEDIUM_COLOR *shadowPixmaps: True *foregroundColor: White
Multi-color icons use fourteen additional colors.
The default value of the colorUse resource is MEDIUM_COLOR. The value of this resource affects the number of color sets used in a palette. Other resources affect the number of colors used to make shadows. The value of the colorUse resource also affects the use of multi-color icons.
Value |
Description |
---|---|
B_W |
"Black and White" Style Manager setting Displays with 1 to 3 color planes Number of color sets: 2 Maximum number of colors: 2 Default number of colors: 2 No multicolor icons |
LOW_COLOR |
"Most Color for Applications" Style Manager setting Displays with 4 to 5 color planes Number of color sets: 2 Maximum number of colors: 12 Default number of colors: 12 No multicolor icons |
MEDIUM_COLOR |
"More Colors for Application" Style Manager setting Displays with 6 color planes Number of color sets: 4 Maximum number of colors: 22 Default number of colors: 22 Multicolor icons |
HIGH_COLOR |
"More Colors for Desktop" Style Manager setting Displays with 7 or more color planes Number of color sets: 8 Maximum number of colors: 42 Default number of colors: 42 Multicolor icons |
default |
The desktop chooses the correct value for that display. (To reduce the number of colors used by the desktop for high-color displays, the default colorUse resource is set to MEDIUM_COLOR.) |
The shadowPixmaps resource directs the desktop to replace the two shadow colors with pixmaps. These pixmaps mix the background color with black or white to simulate top or bottom shadow values. This reduces the number of needed colors by two, since color cells do not need to be allocated for the shadow colors.
Value |
Description |
---|---|
True |
The desktop creates a topShadowPixmap and bottomShadowPixmap to use instead of the shadow colors. |
False |
topShadowColor and bottomShadowColor from the palette are used. |
The default value for shadowPixmaps depends on the colorUse resource you have and the hardware support for the display.
The foregroundColor resource specifies how the foreground is configured in a palette.
Setting |
Result |
---|---|
White |
Foreground is set to white. |
Black |
Foreground is set to black. |
Dynamic (Default) |
Foreground is dynamically set to black or white, depending on the value of background. For instance, white letters on a yellow background are difficult to read, so the system chooses black. |
If foregroundColor is set to either Black or White, the number of colors in the color set is reduced by one, and the foreground will not change in response to changes in the background color.
The default value for foregroundColor is Dynamic, except where the value of colorUse is B_W.
The dynamicColor resource controls whether applications change color dynamically; that is, whether the clients change color when you switch palettes.
Value |
Description |
---|---|
True |
Clients change color dynamically when a new palette is selected. This is the default value. |
False |
Clients do not change color dynamically. When a new palette is selected, clients will use the new colors when the session is restarted. |
When the value of the dynamicColor resource is True, clients that cannot change colors dynamically (non-Motif applications) allocate different cells in the color map than clients that can change colors dynamically, even if you see the same color.
Since all clients can share the same color cells, setting dynamicColor to False reduces the number of colors your desktop consumes.