Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 20th Jun 2008 23:18 UTC
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Member since:
2007-02-05
I think the reason Firefox choose to support GTK as native toolkit is because Firefox as a browser has a philosophy that more GNOME-like. (Keep it simple, and have more advanced extra functionality in plugins/extensions instead of built-in.) Not in the extreme degree that Epiphany does(it does very little out of the box) though.

I think Opera is a lot closer to the KDE-philosophy. It has tons of stuff out-of-the-box. And of course: also uses the Qt-toolkit. With the exception of being open source... =/
Personally I don't think KDE-people should complain too much about lacking stuff in their own toolkit, *alot* of commercial stuff is written in Qt. (Quite simple because Qt is probably a hell lot more effective to program in than GTK. Qt is more RAD-oriented, and it also have (good, no running in X11 or non-native widgets) mac support.) Skype for instance. (And Google Earth if my memory serves me right.)
In addition: how many DE uses Qt except KDE itself? (Correct me if I'm ignorant here!) Not alot fo my knowledge, but XFCE for instances uses GTK, and whenever I see a *box screenshot they're usually running GTK-apps.
That being said, Firefox is open source. Nothing's stopping anyone from creating a theme/extension/modification/whatever-it-takes to make Firefox have native KDE-widgets. That's the beauty of OSS.