The difficult thing, I think, about a mockup is that it might be hard to
translate onto the actual GForge HTML stuff. So someone could come up
with a really nice look, but I might have no idea how to make GForge
actually implement that look.
But sure, suggestions or improvements to the stylesheet or anything else
would be welcome.
Does RF use straight GForge HTML or are there differences?
(Or if it's all CSS, is the stylesheet fully available?)
And, if I (or anyone else) actually get around to doing
something, where should the submissions be sent? I'm
thinking it'd probably be best to create a look similar
to ruby-lang, rubygarden and ruby-doc.
Please, no. Minimalistic is OK, but the red is overdone.
The color red tends to draw the eye and make things emerge from the page or screen. It works well as a highlight color, as a tool for deliberately calling attention to something special. However, making a whole page or site red gets tiresome on the eyes, and makes it harder to have specific items stand out.
Yes, the language is called Ruby, and yes, rubies are red. So what?
Colors should be selected for their functional value first, aesthetic value second, and their coincidental relation to some object last.
Or I can just email it to you, which would probably be easier.
And, if I (or anyone else) actually get around to doing
something, where should the submissions be sent? I'm thinking
it'd probably be best to create a look similar to ruby-lang,
rubygarden and ruby-doc.
Hm. You could post it here somewhere on the support project:
Please, no. Minimalistic is OK, but the red is overdone.
The color red tends to draw the eye and make things emerge from the page
or screen. It works well as a highlight color, as a tool for
deliberately calling attention to something special. However, making a
whole page or site red gets tiresome on the eyes, and makes it harder to
have specific items stand out.
Yes, the language is called Ruby, and yes, rubies are red. So what?
Colors should be selected for their functional value first, aesthetic
value second, and their coincidental relation to some object last.