That would be interesting to see. But would it make Safari lose some of its identity? Making Safari look unique among browsers was one of the reasons they made it brushed metal in …
From a technical standpoint, there really isn't a plastic look. "Plastic" applications use something called a "Unified Toolbar". As the name implies, this simply unifies the toolba…
Quote:
Originally Posted by goMac
Some applications in Tiger, like XCode, take on a plastic background instead of the stripes, but I think that is actually hardcoded in and not …
I tried doing the Unified Toolbar look with all Apple's apps. It would work with Safari and Font Book. It also worked with MarsEdit. Too shabby it doesn't work with iTunes and iCha…
Quote:
Originally Posted by Catfish_Man
This isn't true, in my testing. Even the quick tests with IB that I did looked identical to other unified toolbar apps (Xcode, Mail, etc.…
I tried it with the Finder but I couldn't find it.
If you want to do it with Safari you have to open Safari's "Browser.nib" file. Select "Window" in the window. Press Apple-Shift-…
Quote:
Originally Posted by monkeybrain
p.s. I read somewhere that the Safari toolbar in Tiger is a real toolbar (drag stuff about etc.) That seems too good to be true, is it?
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There is really no "plastic" in the tiger gui -- with the exception of the usual elements such as scrollbars and open, close and shrink to dock buttons, although the main menu bar …
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregorj
The same concept has been applied to brushed metal applications such as safari and the finder.
So why have both? Die brushed metal, die!
The 'PDF Viewer' part of Preview uses a different .nib (PVPDFDocument.nib I think) but when I try and open this in Interface Builder I get a 'Palette (PDFKit) was not found' error.…
It is in the dev tools folder. I found it in /Developer/Extras/Palettes
Not good news though. It converts the tool icons in the segmented control to the flat style. Unfortunately …