So the proposed solution is to do separate them class hierarchies with 
essentially the same properties (colors, fonts, etc) on a Tool-by-Tool basis?
I'm certainly no lover of the current UITheme, but that doesn't sound like it 
scales a whole lot better to me...
(Ref. your example, having UITheme methods aimed at giving Dialogs specific 
active fill colors (so, active fill colors for other types of windows are 
potentially different?) sounds rather the wrong way to go about things...)

Cheers,
Henry

> On 10 Dec 2014, at 5:03 , Tudor Girba <tu...@tudorgirba.com> wrote:
> 
> It is. Read my mail :).
> 
> Doru
> 
> On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 4:59 PM, Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:esteba...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> it doesn’t need to be made for every theme around, just “theme aware”, which 
> means do not use hardcoded values but the ones defined in the themes. 
> 
> Esteban
> 
>> On 10 Dec 2014, at 16:47, Aliaksei Syrel <alex.sy...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:alex.sy...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi,
>> 
>> For now testing Spotter for every existing theme is not on the first place 
>> in our TODO list. But Spotter uses themer mechanism, so anyone can customize 
>> it :)
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> Alex
>> 
>> On Dec 10, 2014 4:42 PM, "Sven Van Caekenberghe" <s...@stfx.eu 
>> <mailto:s...@stfx.eu>> wrote:
>> Is GTSpotter theme-aware ?
>> 
>> It does not seem to use the Dark Theme:
>> 
>> <Screen Shot 2014-12-10 at 16.40.23.png>
>> 
>> Sven
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> www.tudorgirba.com <http://www.tudorgirba.com/>
> 
> "Every thing has its own flow"

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