User interface style sheet language
A User interface stylesheet language is a stylesheet language which is meant to be applied to graphical computer user interfaces. They primarily act as subsidiary languages to style UI elements which are either programmed or marked-up (as in XML-based markup languages).
Examples
- Cascading Style Sheets as used in Mozilla's XUL user interface
- Qt Style Sheets as used in KDE4
- Robert Staudinger's CSS theming for GTK+[1]
gollark: Hmm. It is clearly apparent that I have no idea how git works. What joy.
gollark: They have good JITs.
gollark: That's actually slower than modern JS engines.
gollark: <@!402456897812168705> https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Using-Assembly-Language-with-C.html ← you
gollark: For what purpose?
References
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