Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 14th Feb 2009 12:55 UTC
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Though I suppose you could argue that it is the native toolkit for GNOME it is, after all, the GNOME Tool Kit.
Actually it's the Gimp Toolkit, as in Gimp the image editing program. It was initially created by the Gimp team to use as a GUI toolkit for their program before Gnome existed.




Member since:
2007-08-17
I've not used a Qt app. under KDE for a while, but I always used to find that pure Qt apps always looked like pure Qt apps and not KDE apps. Pure GTK apps, look (to my eyes) the same as any other Gnome app.
Personally, I don't like Chrome so I don't care which toolkit they choose. Having said that, I have to agree that I find their statement, which implies that GTK+ is the native toolkit for Linux, is a little off putting. It isn't even necessarily a native toolkit for Linux, it is cross platform toolkit just like Qt. Though I suppose you could argue that it is the native toolkit for GNOME it is, after all, the GNOME Tool Kit. And we all know that GNOME is the native WM for Ubuntu - and ofcourse Ubuntu === Linux, so I guess they weren't wrong after all.
BTW, to all those arguing that GTK+ is the native toolkit, just because you believe that GNOME has more users - having more users != native. Though I suppose you could say it is "native" for more users.