Comment by WesolyKubeczek
7 hours ago
Problem is, both Firefox and Chrome look out of place on it when you use a non-standard color scheme. Custom keyboard shortcuts won't work on Chrome. When you change a theme from light to dark and vice versa, both browsers like to have text in their UI stuck on the wrong color.
I could use Konqueror, I guess, but its ad blocking plugin (and plugins overall) seems to never have progressed much since KDE 2.
Right, applications can break all sorts of UI consistency. But the question is: do the standard components that the vendor ships do it? I argue: KDE is consistent. I don't want my desktop UI to dictate how an app draws its UI (or games would be impossible).
> But the question is: do the standard components that the vendor ships do it? I argue: KDE is consistent.
Well yes, I do agree with this. Internally it's mostly consistent, at least more so than Windows. Never analysed its UI structures though.
> I don't want my desktop UI to dictate how an app draws its UI (or games would be impossible).
As a platform, ensuring applications running on top of it stay consistent to varying degree is the job of the desktop/OS IMO. To what degree depends on the context, https://asktog.com/atc/principles-of-interaction-design/#con... is a great read.
Even games need it, missing input field features has plagued PC games for decades and can be crippling for input method users, Skyrim's console needs mods to support copy and paste. Custom mouse acceleration curves is the reason everyone disabled it, zero acceleration is the easiest way to make different games handle mouse input consistently.
A shame Linux isn't standardised enough.