Flat Remix is a GNOME Shell theme inspired by material design. It is mostly flat using a colorful palette with some shadows, highlights, and gradients for some depth.
As per title, in Gnome 47 dialog overlays buttons (I believe they are called so) are not themed correctly.
I'm using Gnome 47 with the latest Flat Remix version (fac3b8e).
This is what I mean:
The buttons "Annulla" (Undo) and "Termina sessione" (End session) are as plain black as the background, making them kinda hard to distinguish. Clicking on them still works, executing the action, but there's no theming whatsoever.
I believe in Gnome 46 there were: grey outlines around those buttons; an animation when hovering with the cursor (slightly changing color to a dark grey, like any other element - eg. quick tiles, notifications or any other button); another animation when clicking on them (changing color again, I believe to theme accent color - in my case blue - but I don't really remember).
I'm sorry this is hard to explain and to understand, but I have no way to reproduce the previous state other than rolling back both the theme and the whole Gnome shell (which is kind of an overkill).
As per title, in Gnome 47 dialog overlays buttons (I believe they are called so) are not themed correctly. I'm using Gnome 47 with the latest Flat Remix version (fac3b8e). This is what I mean:
The buttons "Annulla" (Undo) and "Termina sessione" (End session) are as plain black as the background, making them kinda hard to distinguish. Clicking on them still works, executing the action, but there's no theming whatsoever. I believe in Gnome 46 there were: grey outlines around those buttons; an animation when hovering with the cursor (slightly changing color to a dark grey, like any other element - eg. quick tiles, notifications or any other button); another animation when clicking on them (changing color again, I believe to theme accent color - in my case blue - but I don't really remember). I'm sorry this is hard to explain and to understand, but I have no way to reproduce the previous state other than rolling back both the theme and the whole Gnome shell (which is kind of an overkill).