On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 9:22 PM, Ilya Chernykh <neptunia@mail.ru> wrote:
On Friday 07 January 2011 15:16:58 Tiago Marques wrote:

> While I still use it from time to time, the fact is I currently mostly use
> Chrome, because it is rather pointless to me not to.

gtk-qt-engine is buggy and unusable with most styles.


I haven't tested much, only found bugs on the checkboxes.
 
Also when using qtcurve in Gnome, this setting supercedes any
KCM_GTK settings and you just see brocken QtCurve in KDE3,
with jumping buttons which become smaller and bigger depending on focus etc.

Also GTK-based browser shows Gnome desktop in dialogs, as I use different
desktop folders in Gnome and KDE, this is annoying. It also uses GTK icons


True.
 
Aslo it opens files in GTK applications, not in KDE players etc.


Not true. It actually is miles ahead of FF right now, as it calls xdg-open which uses the system wide defined applications - at least in my Gentoo boxes.
 
Best regards,
Tiago

> The browser is fast,
> somewhat lean, renders everything ok and with a gtk-engine-qt package it
> integrates mostly without looking out of place. AFAIK, it is not exactly
> dependence heavy, so that's another plus for integrating a piece of
> software from another party in a distro that shipped with Trinity.