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Thread: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

  1. #1
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    Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    I'm dreading this question a bit because either the answer is really simple or there is no real answer. Either way I come across as a bit dumb.

    I've finally decided that Kubuntu seems to be nearing the end of its usable path for me, so I'm migrating over to mainline Ubuntu with 24.04. I'm a bit unhappy with the "dark" look as the pure gray is a bit harsh for me. I was looking for a slightly color-tinted dark theme. Maybe I'm just spoiled with KDE having hundreds of theme options that are easy to apply. In Ubuntu, it looks like the options are just Settings > Appearance > Style and then either Default or Dark. The accent color barely does anything. The Gnome Tweaks app doesn't appear to change any of the main interfaces even though I've chosen Yaru-blue where possible.

    Are there any additional packages that I can install to provide more than just the two options? When I've searched for tutorials and videos on how to customize the appearance of this release, the options appear to be experimental and dangerous. Most of the examples are like full-blown surgery that will probably end with an unstable desktop environment. Am I missing anything obvious?

  2. #2
    currentshaft Guest

    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    I've never tried it, but https://www.gnome-look.org/browse/ looks relevant to your interests.

  3. #3
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Gnome Tweaks is for Gnome. You are using KDE as you are using Kubuntu, which uses KDE by default, instead of Ubuntu which uses Gnome by default.

  4. #4
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Some examples here:
    https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2351238
    https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread....351238&page=68

    I still like Kubuntu, so have not used Ubuntu for ages, now.
    When I used Ubuntu I used fallback when they converted to Unity, then to Kubuntu.
    UEFI boot install & repair info - Regularly Updated :
    https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2147295
    Please use Thread Tools above first post to change to [Solved] when/if answered completely.

  5. #5
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Quote Originally Posted by currentshaft View Post
    I've never tried it, but https://www.gnome-look.org/browse/ looks relevant to your interests.
    This is part of it. This site is actually a sub-site of opendesktop.org which is also where themes are generally uploaded for the KDE environment, so I'm familiar with the site. The difference is just that in KDE, there are tools in the settings menu that list the compatible themes, download them, install them, and apply them for you. My issue has been more along the lines of trying to figure out how to do all of that stuff in Ubuntu/Gnome since I'm not familiar with it.

  6. #6
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Quote Originally Posted by ActionParsnip View Post
    Gnome Tweaks is for Gnome. You are using KDE as you are using Kubuntu, which uses KDE by default, instead of Ubuntu which uses Gnome by default.
    Just to clarify in case a brief skim of my original post is ambiguous.

    I used to use Kubuntu in the *past*. I know how to do all of this stuff in Kubuntu already.

    I've just begun to use Ubuntu now, so I'm asking about how to do this in Ubuntu and Gnome. That's why I tagged the post as [ubuntu] rather than [kubuntu].

  7. #7
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Quote Originally Posted by oldfred View Post
    Some examples here:
    https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2351238
    https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread....351238&page=68

    I still like Kubuntu, so have not used Ubuntu for ages, now.
    When I used Ubuntu I used fallback when they converted to Unity, then to Kubuntu.
    Unfortunately, that thread doesn't have a whole lot of *how* to make the customizations. That's fair because it isn't really the point of the thread.

    The issue I've been having with Kubuntu for several releases is that it seems like the maintainers are having issues keeping up with even the most basic stuff at this point. I think it has been a slow disintegration since the move away from Unity. Back when the mainline Ubuntu used Unity, it was built heavily on Qt libraries which meant that there was a lot of overlap with KDE users. Back then you could install a small KDE app in mainline Ubuntu without necessarily having to also install hundreds of MB of Qt dependencies.

    I just did a clean install of Kubuntu 24.04 because I upgraded the hardware on one of my rigs. I was using 22.04 before the upgrade. On boot, there were no major web browsers in the Discover store. No Firefox. No Chromium. No Opera. None of the proprietary browsers. I don't think it even had Midori.

    No big deal, they're probably just all snaps now. Maybe I'm missing some snap dependency? I made sure that snapd, snap-store, and every other snap dependency I could think of was installed. Still nothing in Discover. The snap store itself doesn't load up any packages either. None. Apparently it has some sort of issue refreshing itself.

    Discover has always kind of sucked though. Muon always works. Except Kubuntu dropped support for it, and you can no longer install it as of version 24.04.

    Synaptic doesn't support snaps.

    Some people recommend using Apper for now as a replacement. I'm actually not sure whether it supports snaps as I haven't used it before. With a relatively clean Kubuntu 24.04 install, it has a bug with raising privileges to root. You can't actually install anything from it without running it from the command line, lol. I can do that, but at this point I may as well be running a window manager instead of a DE.


    The answer, of course, is that the Kubuntu maintainers aren't incompetent. There just doesn't seem to be enough interest in Kubuntu to provide the resources necessary to keep it maintained.

  8. #8
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    When I installed Kubuntu 24.04, it came with Firefox as a snap.
    It took a lot of work to totally remove all the snaps as some folders & files were buried pretty deep.
    But the standard instructions for converting to Firefox .dep from the ppa worked.
    And first thing I install is snaptic, but it now installs snaps in some cases.
    UEFI boot install & repair info - Regularly Updated :
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    Please use Thread Tools above first post to change to [Solved] when/if answered completely.

  9. #9
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Apologies for the quadruple post. It's a bit rude to not answer people who are trying to help me, and this post isn't really directed at any of them. This is my own fiddling around with my problem.

    The first sentence of my original post is wrong. This is a fairly typical Linux problem where it is doable but definitely not trivial. The "surgery" that I referred to was the process of getting hyprland to work, but that isn't necessary to change basic theming.

    I probably wouldn't have been able to figure out anything without the person/people who put together the "Flat Remix" themes. I really appreciate the fact that they provide installation instructions with all of the different themes that they put out. I haven't tried all of this stuff out yet, so I'm not at the point where I could even attempt something like a walkthrough. Here are some of the steps in case anyone is interested though.

    You need to use the "Extensions" app to make sure that you have installed the "User Themes" extension. Then you need to install gnome-tweaks. The Gnome Tweaks app allows you to apply several of the necessary theme types, but it doesn't help you to install them. For the Gnome Shell themes, you need to put the correct folders into your ~/.themes/ folder (which I had to create), and then apply them in the Gnome Tweaks app. For Flat Remix, I had to download a theme package, extract it to a folder, then copy/paste the subfolders out of that main package into my ~/.themes/ folder. The last step took me a minute to figure out because the Gnome Tweaks app doesn't "see" the themes until you've done that. The Gnome Shell modifies the panels on your desktop. You also have to install a GTK 3 theme. That is supposed to follow roughly the same set of steps. It affects the appearance of some of your apps. This can supposedly be applied in the Gnome Tweaks app after you've installed the theme manually by choosing the "Legacy Apps" theme. It sounds like GTK 4 themes need to be copied into a different folder. Since there is no app available to apply them, that needs to be done entirely from command line. Many current themes package GTK 3 and GTK 4 parts together, so you have to break them up manually to put them into the correct folders. GTK 4 themes should handle your main menus and the most up to date apps. The prevalence of GTK 4 *stuff* in Ubuntu 24.04 means that most of the older guides are no longer sufficient to complete the task in the current version.

    Unlike KDE, I haven't really found any settings menus or apps to change the appearance of the load up screen (plymouth) or login screen (GDM). But I'm okay with their default appearance, so I honestly didn't look very hard.

  10. #10
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    Re: Customizing The Appearance of Ubuntu

    Quote Originally Posted by oldfred View Post
    When I installed Kubuntu 24.04, it came with Firefox as a snap.
    It took a lot of work to totally remove all the snaps as some folders & files were buried pretty deep.
    But the standard instructions for converting to Firefox .dep from the ppa worked.
    And first thing I install is snaptic, but it now installs snaps in some cases.
    If you install the "Full" option for Kubuntu, it comes with Firefox as a snap. I may have shot myself in the foot by choosing the stripped-down option during the Kubuntu install, but I certainly didn't expect it to be as completely and utterly broken as it was. And to be clear, I don't mind snaps. I honestly don't care one way or the other. My install literally could not install snaps graphically. I had to do it from the command line either directly with the snap command, by installing transitional .deb packages, or by launching a 3rd party installer from the command line with root privileges.

    And to be fair, it isn't truly about that one problem. It's the fact that if they allowed that out of the door on a clean install, I can't trust that distro to be maintained in the future. This isn't the case of a hardware issue or third-party software which would be understandable. This is their own software being completely broken on a clean install even after they've had months to release fixes.

    EDIT: Sorry. Made a mistake there. Discover is considered a KDE app. I guess that means that at least in part they can blame some of this on issues with a third party app. All of the issues with snap and the snap store not working are on Kubuntu though.
    Last edited by springshades; July 25th, 2024 at 04:00 AM.

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