Libadwaita 1.2 (UPDATED)
So, half a year after 1.1, libadwaita 1.2 has been released.
While it doesn’t contain everything I had planned (since I ended up being mostly unavailable for about half of the cycle for reasons outside my control), it still has a bunch of additions, so let’s take a look at the changes.
UPDATE
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GNOME's Libadwaita 1.2 Released with Exciting Improvements
Some of the new features of Libadwaita 1.2 include messages adaptive layout and a new type of boxed list rows containing an inline entry.
Over the last year, Libadwaita has been exciting and contentious in the Linux community, particularly among GNOME Desktop devotees. And, of course, not without cause, as it is the new path that the GNOME Project has followed since its version 41.
But first, for those not in the know, let me explain what exactly Libadwaita is. In short, Libadwaita is a GTK 4 library that complements GTK by implementing the GNOME Human Interface Guidelines (HIG). Or in other words, Libadwaita separates GNOME and GTK.