Kill the use of CSS - Fixes a Lot of issues on dark color schemes.

The css was done by me in the first days of subsurface for Qt, and it
was a code that I was never proud of. Mostly because I tougth at the
time that it was better to write it into CSS than to create a new class
just to take care of the size of the default cell height on a tree view.

Now I see that it was a biased approach since it created issues on
dark color schemes and it also didn't make a 'native' experience on
Gnome or OSX, only on KDE.

This fixes that.

Signed-off-by: Tomaz Canabrava <tcanabrava@kde.org>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Tomaz Canabrava 2013-12-11 19:49:50 -02:00 committed by Dirk Hohndel
parent b87cfa9666
commit c5c44e3a82
5 changed files with 15 additions and 36 deletions

View file

@ -95,37 +95,6 @@
<enum>Qt::Horizontal</enum>
</property>
<widget class="DiveListView" name="ListWidget">
<property name="styleSheet">
<string notr="true"> QTreeView {
show-decoration-selected: 1;
}
QTreeView::item {
border: 1px solid #d9d9d9;
border-top-color: transparent;
border-bottom-color: transparent;
padding: 2px;
}
QTreeView::item:hover {
background: qlineargradient(x1: 0, y1: 0, x2: 0, y2: 1, stop: 0 #e7effd, stop: 1 #cbdaf1);
border: 1px solid #bfcde4;
}
QTreeView::item:selected {
border: 1px solid #567dbc;
}
QTreeView::item:selected:active{
background: qlineargradient(x1: 0, y1: 0, x2: 0, y2: 1, stop: 0 #6ea1f1, stop: 1 #567dbc);
}
QTreeView::item:selected:!active {
background: qlineargradient(x1: 0, y1: 0, x2: 0, y2: 1, stop: 0 #6b9be8, stop: 1 #577fbf);
}
</string>
</property>
<property name="alternatingRowColors">
<bool>true</bool>
</property>