Op woensdag 25 oktober 2006 14:22, schreef Farsheed:
So I STRONGLY am for a non-default core theme that:
1) has basic elements shaded or outlined 2) is very well documented 3) is compatible across browsers 4) causes the least headaches for new designers
The only theme that meets that, IMO is box_grey. But I doubt that that one will be considered core worthy by the Great Designer Eyeballs. In the mean time, I am still working on whatsinitsname, a base theme, but that is very-non-core. :) http://cvs.drupal.org/viewcvs/drupal/contributions/themes/whatsinitsname/ I have built three sites with that now, and must say that its basis stands very well trough the three theme-designs. I'd encourage all people in need of a solid, consistent, CSS based, framework, to have a look at it, and send me feedback. Maybe it'll grow popular enough to become core-worthy one day. grin. Once I feel the XHTML, classes and IDs are consistent and solid enough, I will release it, but to get there, I need testers. The proof of the pudding is in the eating, after all. In the mean time, I'd say not to bother too much about developer-worthy core themes ;). No serious developer and designer will or sould consider using them , IMNSHU. Would you really offer your client a site that looks/feels exactly like >9000 other sites on the web? Bèr -- | Bèr Kessels | webschuur.com | Drupal, Joomla and Ruby on Rails web development | | Jabber & Google Talk: ber@jabber.webschuur.com | | http://bler.webschuur.com | http://www.webschuur.com |