

For example, the default button adornment in GTK NWF was recently fixed, and 4-button scrollbars were added to the KDE/Qt NWF, and prelight/highlight ability was added to all themes. Work has been progressing rather well, mostly with cleanups of existing code and making sure all themes and widgets work. Integration into the mainline OOo sources could happen as early as 1.1.2, tentatively targetted for March/April 04.

All in all, this project has been a success and has proven a fairly effective way of updating the look of to match its native environment. Some work on widget states (ie enabled, disabled, highlited, etc) still needs to be done as can be seen in the m8blue screenshot's scrollbar buttons. The widget set is fairly complete, and most widgets are now native on Win32 and GTK. The currently supported platforms are GTK+ (Dan Williams), Win32 (Stephan Schaefer), and KDE/Qt (Jan Holesovsky), with an Aqua version planned (and already implemented in the external NeoOffice project). The architecture incldues a fallback mechanism, allow each platform to incrementally enable a native look for each widget.

The GSL project on hosts the design document and specification for the NWF (Download). All work is in OOo CVS, in the 'cws_sr圆45_nativewidget1' CVS tag. The project has proved to be fairly simple and easy to code thus far. The goals were to be minimally invasive, but maximize the visual appeal in the shortest time possible. The NWF, starting in March/April 2003 with posts to is an extensible way to use the native look and feel of the host platform as the GUI of. Native Widget Framework for Native Widget Framework (NWF)
