Native look and feel
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The question what exactly defines "native look and feel" never gets awnsered
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The question what exactly defines "native look and feel" never gets awnsered
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The default look of the operating system and or window manager/desktop environment.
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And thats often all I get to go on.
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The question what exactly defines "native look and feel" never gets awnsered
"Native Look" is Indian lookin' fella in Canada, Australia and USA
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And thats often all I get to go on.
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The question what exactly defines "native look and feel" never gets awnsered
It means that it won't get funny looks or racist comments if it goes out in your neighbourhood.
I was brought up to respect my elders. I don't respect many people nowadays.
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And thats often all I get to go on.
Last time I wrote front end stuff I recall OS producers having intensely complex style guides for "look and feel compliance." Unless of course you're writing for Linux, in which case "native look and feel" means "throw a bunch of poorly aligned crap at the screen and say 'well its like, open source man, change it yourself' whenever anybody complains."
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The question what exactly defines "native look and feel" never gets awnsered
In Spain NATIVE LOOK would be you with a Sevillana's dress (you know a polka-dot dress[^]). And in Spain, the NATIVE FEEL would be you with a toro's[^] horn in your ass. And this summarizes well what is the Spanish look and feel. This is specially true if you think about our politics... X|
[www.tamautomation.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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The question what exactly defines "native look and feel" never gets awnsered
observe the difference: Native windows look and feel http://images.savagereactor.co.uk/posts/2009/03/windows.png[^] GTK look and feel http://www.ffnn.nl/media/.gallery/image379.png[^] Java Swing look and feel http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/figures/uiswing/lookandfeel/nimbus.png[^] button, slider, label, they all have different background, etc.. if you use them you will see that they react differently
My programming get away... The Blog... DirectX for WinRT/C# since 2013! Taking over the world since 1371!
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Last time I wrote front end stuff I recall OS producers having intensely complex style guides for "look and feel compliance." Unless of course you're writing for Linux, in which case "native look and feel" means "throw a bunch of poorly aligned crap at the screen and say 'well its like, open source man, change it yourself' whenever anybody complains."