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Common Desktop Environment: User's Guide > Chapter 7 Customizing
the Desktop EnvironmentCustomizing Screen Appearance |
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You can change the following aspects of your screen appearance:
You set your workspace colors through a color palette. The number of color buttons in the palette is determined by your display type and the Number of Colors selection. The default is More Colors for Applications, which keeps the number of colors used on a high-color display to a minimum. To increase the number of color buttons on a high-color display, select More Colors for Desktop in the Number of Colors dialog box and restart the current session. While you can't use more colors than your display allows, you can reduce the number of colors used by the desktop by choosing a lower-valued color usage. For example, if you have a high-color display and have selected More Colors for Desktop but you want to run a color-rich application such as a computer- aided design (CAD) program, you should choose More Colors for Applications or Most Colors for Applications to decrease the number of colors that the desktop uses. The remaining colors are available for the CAD program. Your display type and the Number of Colors selection determine the number of color buttons that make up a palette. You will have two, four, or eight color buttons in the Color dialog box. The different color buttons in the palette control the colors used for different areas of the screen. If you have eight color buttons, they will be used as follows (buttons numbered from left to right, top to bottom):
If you have four color buttons, they will be used as follows (buttons numbered from left to right):
If you have two color buttons, they will be used as follows (buttons numbered from left to right):
Workspace colors come from predefined color palettes. The Color dialog box lists the palettes that came with your system plus any palettes you have added.
You can create your own palette by copying and modifying an existing palette.
Adding a palette makes a copy of the currently selected palette with a unique name. You then create your custom palette by modifying the copy, so the original palette is not changed.
When you delete a palette, Style Manager prefixes the name of the palette with a ~ and stores a copy in the HomeDirectory/.dt/palettes directory.
You must log out and back in before the change takes effect. The font size you select in Style Manager is used on window labels and text. The new font size is used as applications are started. Existing windows will not reflect the change. You can select a backdrop pattern to cover each of your workspaces (the screen area underneath your windows). A unique backdrop for each workspace adds variety and helps you to quickly identify the workspace you are in. |
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