Hi, I've added a CSS Files page with the
comment that Sergiu sent.
I'll be adding more information later on.
Antonio
2007/3/15, Antonio Goncalves <antonio.mailing(a)gmail.com>om>:
I'm not the best "presentation layer" guy (god I've struggled so
much with HTML and CSS) but I can do that. I will create a few
pages explaining how skining works (Sergiu I might ask you more
questions though). I'm leaving tonight for a long week-end at the
mountain (still hoping to find some snow) and I'll start the job
mid of next week.
Antonio
2007/3/15, Vincent Massol <vincent(a)massol.net>et>:
Guys,
What would be real cool would be to gather this information on
:) Antonio, if this is something you can help with
that'd be great as I know Sergiu is busy fixing bugs and
implementing features for 1.0 Beta 6...
Thanks
-Vincent
On Mar 15, 2007, at 1:57 PM, Antonio Goncalves wrote:
Thanks Sergiu, that really helps to clarify
things. I was using
Firebug to try to understand which css property was inherited by
which style and sometimes you can get lost. When you say that in
the near future the skin will be cleaned up, do you have it
planed ? Is it going to be for the 1.0 ?
BTW I just have a comment about what you said about the css
files. I can understand why css styles are splited in different
files, but wouldn't you want <h1> to have the same style
of .heading-1 and therefore be in the same file ? Like <h2> for
heading-1-1, <b> for bold and so on. For my skin I was going to
do that because I don't want to have the same css code repeated
in several files.
Thanks again
Antonio
2007/3/14, Sergiu Dumitriu <sergiu.dumitriu(a)gmail.com>om>:
On 3/14/07, Antonio Goncalves <antonio.mailing(a)gmail.com > wrote:
Hi everybody,
I've started using xWiki a few weeks ago and now I want to make
it look the way I want. So I'm trying to create my own skin. I
read the Admin guide about it, plus other mails but I have to say
it's not an easy task. I don't really know where to start because
I don't understand all the css files. xwiki10b1 has 23 css files
but I think only 11 are used. Am I right ( style.css;
elements.css; classes.css; xwiki.css; wiki.css; page.css;
rss.css; screenlayout.css; microformats.css; presentation.css;
colorsblack.css;) ? If yes, what are the other ones used for
(chw.css, colorsblue.css, customcoloes.css , style1.css...) ? Why
is page.css empty, is it the one to fill ? In other words, which
css should I change if I want another layout, another font,
colours....
History:
1. At first, the skin was written in a few (~5) css files, where
all the css properties were put together. (early variants of the
'default' skin)
2. Then came the idea of separating the different components of
the skin: basic elements, layout, colors, etc. Some of the files
from 1/ were split, part of the css was moved around. This
happened along with working for the new skin ('xwiki10'), so old
content was reorganized and new content was added. Together with
the fact that very little time was available, the whole process
ended in the mess you see in the current skin.
2b. At the same time, there was the idea of making a XWiki.Skin
class, containing some options for colors, margins, widths, and
to generate the skin based on these variables. For example, there
should have been a 'padding' property which should have been used
for panels, menu, page content... It was working for a while in
the 'xwiki10' skin. The skin was supposed to be customized (well,
based on the same general layout) using a skin wizard.
3. When work for the current skin ('xwiki10b1') started, even
more css rules were created and added.
4. In the (near) future, the skin will be cleaned up, resulting
in a clear separation of file purpose, no more deprecated code,
and the ability to change easily the skin.
5. In the distant future, xwiki plugins will be able to register
new css files, which won't be stored in the skins directory, but
either as files in the jar/xar, or as attachments to a page.
Core files:
- style.css = top level style file. It's purpose is to include
all the other files. If there is any other css in there, it
shouldn't.
- elements.css = intended to provide general design rules
regarding the html elements. For example, default font size and
family for headings, underline for links, etc. It should not
provide color properties.
- classes.css = like elements.css, but formats elements having a
similar semantic meaning (after all, a class should have a
semantic name, and not a random id). As
examples, .underline, .hidden, .sep, .wikicreatelink,
or .heading-1-1. This should only contain general classes, for
specific elements see presentation.css
- screenlayout.css = the place where the general layout of the
interface is specified. This file should contain rules regarding
position, dimension and display mode for the major elements of
the interface (header, side panels, menu, footer...)
- presentation.css = refinement of screenlayout.css. This is
where borders, margins, paddings are set, font styling for
objects not in elements.css or classes.css, along with some
specific elements of the layout which are not affecting the
general layout (where is the profile picture displayed, how is
the comment auther displayed, etc.)
- colors*.css = the place where the skin gets painted. Without
this file, the skin should be black and white only (except the
blue links). Font color, background, border color,
Special purpose files:
- rss.css = a few rules to format how profile rss is displayed
- microformats.css = stylesheet to format the different
microformats-enabled pages (user profile, blog, calendar...)
- chwSkin.css = formatting for the Chart Wizard (soon to be re-
released)
- tdwSkin.css = formatting of the Table Datasource Wizard (part
of Chart Wizard)
- print.css = formatting for the @media print. Currently kind of
empty and useless, it must be written once the albatross skin is
ready.
Deprecated (soon to be removed)
- wiki.css = it was supposed to format wiki generated syntax,
like .wikilink and .heading-1-1
- xwiki.css = it was one of the few files holding css (stage 1)
- ie.css = some old hacks to make the 'default' skin work in IE too.
- styel1/2/3.css = variants of the 'default' skin, with green,
pink and ~yellow colors.
- temp.css = used for some tests; generally a buffer before
splitting rules among the other files.
Possibly usable files, if somebody makes the skin wizard.
- customlayout.css = a dynamic version of screenlayout.css, using
properties defined in a skin object. Should be parsed by velocity.
- customcolors.css = same, but for colors.
Hope this helps.
Sergiu
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