On Tuesday 29 August 2006 13:12, Neil Drumm wrote:
Jeff Robbins wrote:
Drupal that aims to become the default core theme for the next version of Drupal. There's still a fair amount of bug fixing, tweaking, and
Lets try setting some goals here:
* It must be a good theme technically. - Work in the browsers we say Drupal works in (it is somewhere in the handbook). - Be tableless, because tables are for storing tabular data, not visual layout. - Not override more themeable functions than we already do. - Have good code style. * It must look good. * It must be customizable. - By people who are never going to touch the CSS. The theme configuration options need to work and produce good results. - And by people who will touch the CSS. * It must improve the Drupal brand. This is the first thing people see.
This is just a quick list, so feel free to tell us what needs to be changed.
I am reminded of the Slashdot effort to modernize their design. First, they cleaned up the underlying HTML to not be 1995-style tag soup. Then, they made a call for CSS efforts, with the description of "it should be Slashdot, but not. It should have all the elements that visually make Slashdot what it is, but be new and cool. It should change everything and change nothing at the same time." Somehow that contradictory description came up with several halfway-decent designs. :-) Should we be thinking along the same lines? Don't throw out and replace BlueMarine with something new and fancy and OMG-so-sexy, but spruce up and modernize BlueMarine to not look/feel 1995-ish. The path to get there could go through Zen, but the end result should keep that "simple first" feel. Hell, just switching to the 3D Druplicon would be a market improvement, branding-wise. :-) Question: I know we want to avoid CSS browser hacks. What about extensions? BlueBeach uses the Gecko-specific -moz-border-radius attribute. Would that be kosher for a default theme? -- Larry Garfield AIM: LOLG42 larry@garfieldtech.com ICQ: 6817012 "If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it." -- Thomas Jefferson