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Aqua (user interface)

 

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Aqua (user interface)



 
 
Aqua is the graphical user interface
Graphical user interface

A graphical user interface is a type of user interface which allows people to human-computer interaction such as computers; hand-held devices such as MP3 Players, Portable Media Players or Gaming devices; household appliances and office equipment....
 and primary visual theme
Theme (computing)

In computing, a theme is a preset package containing graphical appearance details, used to customize the look and feel of an operating system, widget set or window manager....
 of Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X
Mac OS X

Mac OS X is a line of computer operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc., and since 2002 has been included with all new Macintosh computer systems....
 operating system
Operating system

An operating system is an interface between hardware and applications; it is responsible for the management and coordination of activities and the sharing of the limited resources of the computer....
. It is based around the theme of water, as its name suggests, with droplet-like elements and liberal use of translucency and reflection effects. Steve Jobs noted Aqua's glossy aesthetic: "One of the design goals was when you saw it you wanted to lick it."

The Aqua theme and user interface was first introduced at the January 2000 Macworld Conference & Expo
Macworld Conference & Expo

Produced by Boston-based IDG World Expo, Macworld Conference & Expo is a trade show dedicated to the Apple Inc. Macintosh platform with conference tracks held annually in the United States, usually during the second week of January....
 in San Francisco.






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Aqua is the graphical user interface
Graphical user interface

A graphical user interface is a type of user interface which allows people to human-computer interaction such as computers; hand-held devices such as MP3 Players, Portable Media Players or Gaming devices; household appliances and office equipment....
 and primary visual theme
Theme (computing)

In computing, a theme is a preset package containing graphical appearance details, used to customize the look and feel of an operating system, widget set or window manager....
 of Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X
Mac OS X

Mac OS X is a line of computer operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc., and since 2002 has been included with all new Macintosh computer systems....
 operating system
Operating system

An operating system is an interface between hardware and applications; it is responsible for the management and coordination of activities and the sharing of the limited resources of the computer....
. It is based around the theme of water, as its name suggests, with droplet-like elements and liberal use of translucency and reflection effects. Steve Jobs noted Aqua's glossy aesthetic: "One of the design goals was when you saw it you wanted to lick it."

The Aqua theme and user interface was first introduced at the January 2000 Macworld Conference & Expo
Macworld Conference & Expo

Produced by Boston-based IDG World Expo, Macworld Conference & Expo is a trade show dedicated to the Apple Inc. Macintosh platform with conference tracks held annually in the United States, usually during the second week of January....
 in San Francisco. Aqua's first appearance in a commercial product was in the July 2000 release of iMovie 2
IMovie

iMovie is a video editing software application which allows Mac users to edit their own home movies. It was originally released by Apple Inc. in 1999 as a Mac OS 8 application bundled with the first FireWire-enabled Apple Macintosh model....
.

Aqua design elements make up the uniform appearance of most Mac OS X applications. Its goal is to "incorporate color, depth, translucence, and complex textures into a visually appealing interface" in Mac OS X applications. Although Aqua is the entire user interface, two notable features of Aqua are gel-like buttons (such as the ones colored red, yellow, and green that control the windows), and a Dock
Dock (computing)

The Dock is a prominent feature of the graphical user interface of Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X operating system, which is used to launch applications, and switch between running applications....
, which facilitates the launching of and navigation between applications.

Aqua is the successor to Platinum
Appearance Manager

In the pre-Mac OS X version of the Mac OS, the Appearance Manager controlled the overall look of the Mac Graphical user interface widgets and supported several themes....
, which was used in Mac OS 8
Mac OS 8

Mac OS 8 is an operating system released by Apple Inc. on July 26 1997. It represented the largest overhaul of the Mac OS since the release of System 7 , some six years previous....
 and 9
Mac OS 9

Mac OS 9 is the final major release of Apple Inc. "Classic" Mac OS. Introduced on October 23 1999, Apple positioned it as "The Best Internet Operating System Ever," highlighting Apple Sherlock Internet search capabilities, integration with Apple's free online services known as .Mac, and improved Open Transport networking....
.

Evolution

Macosxpb
Much of Aqua's original design was intended to complement the translucent two-tone look of Apple's contemporaneous hardware, primarily the original bondi blue
Bondi blue

Bondi blue is a color. It belongs to the cyan family of blues. It is identical to the Crayola crayon color Blue-Green. .In culture...
 iMac
IMAC

iMac is a line of Apple Macintosh computers.IMAC or Imac may also refer to:*Necmettin Imac , Netherlands footballer*Isochronous media access controller, a method of transferring data that must not be interrupted ....
. In 2003 and 2004, Apple moved to the use of brushed metal
Brushed metal (interface)

Brushed metal was a graphical user interface design used in Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system for Apple Macintosh computers. It can be compared with the Aqua interface....
 in their industrial design (such as with the aluminum Apple Cinema Display
Apple Cinema Display

The Apple Cinema Display is a product line of widescreen flat panel computer display made by Apple Inc.Apple initially introduced the 22" Apple Cinema Display in September 1999 alongside the Power Mac G4....
s); Aqua changed accordingly, incorporating the additional brushed metal look while deemphasizing the pinstripe backgrounds and transparency effects. In recent years, however, the brushed metal look has also been abandoned, in favor of white semi-reflective plastic, similar to the industrial design of the original iPod
IPod

iPod is a brand of portable media players designed and marketed by Apple Inc. and launched on . The product line-up includes the hard drive-based iPod Classic, the touchscreen iPod Touch, the video-capable iPod Nano, and the compact iPod Shuffle....
. This somewhat inconsistent mix of interface styles has been controversial among the Mac OS X user community. Apple replaced these inconsistent window themes with the introduction of Mac OS X Leopard
Mac OS X v10.5

Mac OS X version 10.5 "Leopard" is the sixth Software version of Mac OS X, Apple Inc. desktop and server operating system for Apple Macintosh computers, and the successor to Mac OS X v10.4 "Tiger"....
.

Up until Mac OS X Leopard, each successive release of Mac OS X brought a new “Aqua Blue” wallpaper
Computer wallpaper

The terms wallpaper, desktop picture and desktop background refer to an image used as a background on a computer screen, usually for the desktop metaphor of a graphical user interface....
. It should be noted that in recent releases of OS X, the focus on traditional interface elements, such as drawers, has generally moved to alternative innovations such as movable palettes and inspectors
Inspector window

An inspector window is a type of computing window that shows current parameters of a selected object and allows these parameters to be changed on-the-fly....
. In general, there has also been a move towards using sidebars
Sidebar (computing)

The sidebar is a term that is used for a Elements of graphical user interfaces that displays various forms of information to the side of an application or desktop user interface....
, which now appear in many Apple applications; in addition, there are more contextual interface elements and full-screen interfaces in many applications.

The graphical design "fashion" of the various Aqua widgets over time are said by some to closely mirror, or draw upon the popularity of design elements in the graphical design, or application skinning world. Notably the Aqua menu bar was seen sporting elements from Max Rudberg's Milk theme in 10.3 Panther. In 10.4 Tiger the glossy look of the menu bar closely resembled Smoothstripes released in 2004, and finally 10.5 Leopard's flatter design of the menu bar mimicked the various Plastic Pro "flat plastic" styled themes that originated in theming communities in the years after Smoothstripes.

Mac OS X 10.2 (Jaguar)

Jaguar
Mac OS X v10.2

Mac OS X version 10.2 ?Jaguar? was the third Software version of Mac OS X, Apple Inc. desktop and server operating system. It superseded Mac OS X v10.1 code name Puma and preceded Mac OS X v10.3 ?Panther?....
 brought with it flatter interface elements, such as new buttons and drop-down menus, as well as reducing the transparency to tone down the pinstripes in windows and menus. These trends would continue in further Mac OS X releases.
Am Macosx Panther

Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther)

In Mac OS X Panther
Mac OS X v10.3

Mac OS X version 10.3 ?Panther? was the fourth Software version of Mac OS X, Apple Inc. desktop and server operating system. It followed Mac OS X v10.2 ?Jaguar? and preceded Mac OS X v10.4 ?Tiger?....
, brushed metal was fused to the heart of the Macintosh: the Finder. New buttons were made to appear sunken into their surroundings, following a general trend of more flattened interface elements in the operating system. The traditional pinstripes were replaced with a much subtler "milk" theme, most notably in the menu bar
Menu bar

A menu bar is a region where Menu are housed. Its purpose is to house window- or application-specific menus which provide access to such functions as opening files, interacting with an application, or help....
, and the use of transparency was again reduced (for example in the title bars of inactive windows). Tabs
Tab (GUI)

In graphical user interfaces, a tab is a navigational Widget for switching between sets of controls or documents. It is traditionally designed as a text label within a rectangular box with its top borders rounded....
 also changed; they were made flatter and the whole tab area was sunken rather than raised. Tab buttons were centered on the top border of the tab area. New icons appeared across the system, including a new flatter, glossier Finder icon and a new System Preferences icon.

Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger)

Tiger
Mac OS X v10.4

Mac OS X version 10.4 ?Tiger? was the fifth Software version of Mac OS X, Apple Inc. desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers....
 brought more subtle changes, including the Unified titlebar scheme. Pinstripes were now removed from the menu bar entirely, replaced with a new glossy look. Tabs were altered to appear as normal buttons. The Apple menu icon was toned down to a more matte appearance and the new Spotlight
Spotlight (software)

Spotlight is a system-wide desktop search feature of Apple Inc. Mac OS X operating system introduced in version Mac OS X v10.4 on April 29, 2005....
 search utility is permanently bound to the very right of the menu bar in the same color and gradient of the Apple menu.

Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard)

In Leopard
Mac OS X v10.5

Mac OS X version 10.5 "Leopard" is the sixth Software version of Mac OS X, Apple Inc. desktop and server operating system for Apple Macintosh computers, and the successor to Mac OS X v10.4 "Tiger"....
, several changes have been made to the user interface. The Dock
Dock (computing)

The Dock is a prominent feature of the graphical user interface of Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X operating system, which is used to launch applications, and switch between running applications....
 was made to look more three dimensional, with a reflective “floor” for icons to sit on and icon labels having a semi-transparent background. Active applications are no longer indicated by a black triangle, but now by a glowing blue ball. The dividing line between applications and other Dock items now resembles a pedestrian crossing
Pedestrian crossing

A pedestrian crossing or crosswalk is a designated point on a road at which some means are employed to assist pedestrians wishing to cross....
 instead of a simple line. The dock is reflective of all elements on the screen except for the mouse cursor. “Stacks” are groups of files which can be stored in the Dock, and fan out when clicked.

The Dock is black translucent with a white border and rounded corners when placed on the sides, but it retains a 2D form of its new dividing line. The 2D form can also be applied to the default (bottom) Dock position with third-party tweaking utilities or by running a Terminal command to update a system configuration file.

The menu bar
Menu bar

A menu bar is a region where Menu are housed. Its purpose is to house window- or application-specific menus which provide access to such functions as opening files, interacting with an application, or help....
 at the top of the screen now has the option of being semi-transparent, a feature only available on Macs with a Core Image-capable graphics card installed (in non-upgraded specification this is all Intel Macs and PowerPC
PowerPC

PowerPC is a RISC instruction set architecture created by the 1991 Apple Inc.?IBM?Motorola alliance, known as AIM alliance. Originally intended for personal computers, PowerPC CPUs have since become popular embedded system and high-performance processors....
 G5s, as well as some later PowerPC
PowerPC

PowerPC is a RISC instruction set architecture created by the 1991 Apple Inc.?IBM?Motorola alliance, known as AIM alliance. Originally intended for personal computers, PowerPC CPUs have since become popular embedded system and high-performance processors....
 G4s). Contextual Menus are now all rounded (only slightly, like the corners of windows).

The drop shadow of the active window is now greatly enlarged for emphasis. Inactive windows are less prominent for greater contrast between active and inactive windows. Title bars are a darker shade of grey, and all toolbars now use a darker “Unified” scheme. Brushed metal
Brushed metal (interface)

Brushed metal was a graphical user interface design used in Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system for Apple Macintosh computers. It can be compared with the Aqua interface....
 is no longer present, and has been replaced instead by a white “plastic” gradient scheme. Many windows now have minimal borders or none at all. Pinstripes in window backgrounds have now been completely removed. Sheets are now semi-transparent as well as blurring the area behind them for greater legibility.

Numerous icons have been changed, including a set of new folder icons, a new System Preferences icon and an updated Terminal icon, and all main icons have been redrawn in a high-resolution 512-by-512 size for sharper viewing in Quick Look
Quick Look

Quick Look is a quick preview feature developed by Apple Inc. which is included in their current operating system, Mac OS X v10.5 "Leopard". It was announced and demonstrated at Apple Worldwide Developers Conference 2007....
 and Cover Flow.

The default background image has also been changed to a purple aurora
Aurora (astronomy)

Auroras, sometimes called the northern and southern lights or aurorae , are natural light displays in the sky, usually observed at night sky, particularly in the Geographical pole....
 superimposed over a star
Star

A star is a massive, luminous ball of Plasma that is held together by its own gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun, which is the source of most of the energy on Earth....
 field instead of the previous aqua-blue themes in prior versions of OS X.

Windows applications


The Aqua theme has also been embedded in applications made by Apple for use in Microsoft Windows
Microsoft Windows

Microsoft Windows is a series of software operating systems and graphical user interfaces produced by Microsoft. Microsoft first introduced an operating environment named Windows in November 1985 as an add-on to MS-DOS in response to the growing interest in graphical user interfaces ....
 such as iTunes
ITunes

iTunes is a Proprietary software digital media media player application, used for playing and organizing digital music and video files. The program is also an interface to manage the contents on Apple's popular iPod digital media players as well as the iPhone....
, QuickTime
QuickTime

QuickTime is a multimedia framework developed by Apple Inc., capable of handling various formats of digital video, media clips, sound, text, animation, music, and QuickTime VRs....
, and the Safari web browser
Safari (web browser)

Safari is a web browser developed by Apple Inc.. First released as a beta on January 7, 2003 on the company's Mac OS X operating system, it became Apple's default browser beginning with Mac OS X v10.3, commonly known as "OS X Panther." Apple has also made Safari the native browser for the iPhone OS....
. iTunes for Windows, which has exactly the same theme as the Mac OS X version (apart from the more Windows-like buttons that appear on the right-hand side of the title bar), also includes Cover Flow, which is incorporated into Leopard. The Windows version of Safari includes a functional Aqua scrollbar, as well as sheet dialogs very similar to those in Mac OS X. It should be noted, however, that in all cases of (what were originally) Macintosh programs running on the Windows platform, there are irreconcilable differences due to the fact that Mac OS X utilizes a distinctly different UI rendering system (which, among other things, allows it to run PDFs without additional software).

User interface

White and blue are two principal colors which define the Aqua style. Title bars, window backgrounds, buttons, menus and other interface elements are all found in white, and some, like scrollbars and menu items, are accented with a shade of blue. Most of the interface elements have a "glass" or "gel" effect applied to them; for instance, David Pogue
David Pogue

David Pogue is a technology writer, journalist and commentator. He is a personal technology columnist for the New York Times, an Emmy Award-winning tech correspondent for CBS News Sunday Morning, and weekly tech correspondent for CNBC....
 described the original Aqua scrollbar
Scrollbar

A scrollbar is a graphical object in a GUI with which continuous text, pictures or anything else can be Scrolling including time in video applications, i.e., viewed even if it does not fit into the space in a computer display, window , or viewport....
s as "lickable globs of Crest Berrylicious Toothpaste Gel".

Interface elements

Below, all Mac OS X Cocoa
Cocoa (API)

Cocoa is one of Apple Inc.'s native object-oriented application program environment for the Mac OS X operating system. It is one of four major Application programming interfaces available for Mac OS X; the others are Carbon , POSIX , and Java platform....
 interface elements ('controls') and their NEXTSTEP
NEXTSTEP

Nextstep was the original Object-oriented operating system, computer multitasking operating system that NeXT developed to run on its range of proprietary computers, such as the NeXTcube....
 class name are given. Most of the controls are available in three sizes: regular, small and mini.

Windows
Both the standard Aqua-themed pinstriped windows (NSWindow) and the brushed metal windows appear to have the title bar buttons sunken into the window, however in versions of Mac OS X prior to 10.2, the buttons appeared to be on top of the pinstriped windows. Brushed metal windows also have more plastic-like buttons. Mac OS X also allows users to choose a Graphite version instead of a Blue version of the interface. (In Graphite, window controls appear silverish-grey instead of red, yellow, and green.)

Toolbars, defined as NSToolbar, are available in two types: standard or unified. Standard retains the normal Aqua title bar and simply places a row of icons below it, whilst the unified look extends the title bar downwards and places icons on top of it, as if the window has one large title bar.

Sheets, which are modal window
Modal window

In user interface design, a modal window is a child window which requires the user to interact with it before they can return to operating the parent application, thus preventing the workflow on the application main window....
s, are also defined as NSWindow. When opened, they are thrusted towards the user like a sheet of paper, hence the name. They are partially transparent and focus attention on the content of the sheet. The parent window's controls are disabled until the sheet is dismissed, but the user is able to continue work in other windows (including those in the same application) whilst the sheet is open.

Menus
Menus are backed with a slightly translucent solid gray, and when menu items are highlighted they appear blue. In application
Application software

Application software is any tool that functions and is operated by means of a computer, with the purpose of supporting or improving the software user 's work....
 menus, which run in a single bar across the top of the screen
Screen

Screen may refer to:...
, keyboard shortcuts appear to the right-hand side of the menu whilst the actual menu item is on the left.

Drop down menus for use in windows themselves (NSPopUpButton) are also available in several varieties. The standard "pop up" menu is white with a blue end cap with opposing arrows, whilst 'pull down' menus only have one downward facing arrow in the end cap. 'Pull down' menus are available four different Aqua varieties, most of which have fallen into disuse with subsequent Mac OS X releases.

Text boxes and fields
Text boxes are black on white text with a sunken effect border, and are classed as NSTextField. In addition to regular square text boxes, rounded search text boxes are available (NSSearchField). For more extensive text requirements, NSTextView provides a larger, multi-line text field. A combined text box and pull down menu is available, NSComboBox, which allows the user to type in a value in addition to choosing from a menu. NSDatePicker is a combination textbox and picker control, which allows the user to type in a date and time or edit it with directional buttons. NSTokenField was introduced with Mac OS X v10.4
Mac OS X v10.4

Mac OS X version 10.4 ?Tiger? was the fifth Software version of Mac OS X, Apple Inc. desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers....
, and allows the user to drag non-editable 'tokens' to a text box, between which text can be typed. Whitespace before and after the tokens is trimmed.

Push buttons

Standard push buttons with rounded corners are available in two varieties: white and blue. A blue button is the default action, and will appear to "pulse" to prompt the user to carry out that action. The action of a blue button can usually also be invoked with the return key. White buttons are usually associated with all other actions.

Also available are rounded bevel buttons, designed to hold an icon; standard square buttons; glass square buttons and round buttons. In addition, circular, purple online help
Online help

Online help is topic-oriented, procedural or reference information delivered through computer software. It is a form of User Assistance. Most online help is designed to give assistance in the use of a software application or operating system, but can also be used to present information on a broad range of subjects....
 buttons are available which display help relative to the current task when clicked. All types of button are classed as NSButton. Disclosure triangles, although technically buttons, allow views of controls to be shown and hidden to preserve space.

Checkboxes and radio buttons

In Mac OS X, empty check boxes are small, white rounded rectangles. When they are checked, they turn blue and a check is present. They are defined as NSButtons, in essence they are buttons which can be toggled on or off. Radio buttons are similar in appearance and behaviour except they are circular and contain a dot instead of a check. Radio button groups are defined as NSMatrices containing radio buttons defined as NSButtons.

Tables and lists
Tables and lists can be broadly categorised in three ways: NSTableView, a standard multi-columnar table with space to enter values or place other interface elements such as buttons; NSOutlineView, which is the same as NSTableView except it can contain disclosure triangles to show and hide sets of data; and NSBrowser, akin to the column view in the Finder. All table views can use alternating blue and white row backgrounds.

Progress indicators
Two main types of progress indicator are available: a progress bar or a spinning wheel (not the "beachball" wait cursor
Spinning wait cursor

The spinning wait cursor is a cursor in Apple Computer's Mac OS X that indicates an application software is not responding to system events. It is similar to the "not responding" status in the Microsoft Windows task manager....
). Both are defined as NSProgressIndicator. The progress bar itself is available in two varieties: indeterminate, which simply shows diagonal blue and white stripes in animation with no measure of progress; or determinate, which shows a blue pulsing bar against a white background proportional to the percentage of a task completed. The spinning wheel indicator, also found in the Mac OS X startup screen, is simply a series of lines of various tones arranged in a circle spinning, like the side view of a rotating spoked wheel. Many other interfaces have adopted this device, including the Firefox web browser and many web sites.

Miscellaneous
Sliders are available in three types: one with tick marks and a triangular scrubber, one with a round scrubber and no tick marks and a circular slider which can be rotated. All are defined as NSSlider, and are available horizontally or vertically. The circular slider is simply a gray dot on a white circle which can be rotated to set values.

Mac OS X has a standard control for picking colors, NSColorWell, which appears as a regular square button with a color sample in the middle. When clicked, it shows the standard Mac OS X color palette.

Tab views (NSTabView) in Mac OS X appear to be sunken into the window, and are shaded darker and darker each time a new tab view is added inside another. The tabs appear in a row along the top of the sunken area, and are simply a series of white toggle buttons. The currently selected tab is blue. NSBox is a similar control, used to group interface elements, and uses the same sunken appearance, except without tabs. Image "wells" are also available (NSImageView), a small, sunken container into which image files can be dropped.

Fonts

Apple uses the Lucida Grande
Lucida Grande

Lucida Grande is a Sans-serif#Classification sans-serif typeface included with the Mac OS X operating system. It is a member of the Lucida family of typefaces designed by Charles Bigelow and Kris Holmes....
 font as the standard system font in various sizes and weights. Some areas of the operating system use another font, Helvetica
Helvetica

Helvetica is a widely used sans-serif typeface developed in 1957 by Swiss typeface designer Max Miedinger....
. Mac OS X makes use of system-wide font anti-aliasing
Anti-aliasing

In digital signal processing, anti-aliasing is the technique of minimizing the distortion artifacts known as aliasing when representing a high-resolution signal at a lower resolution....
 to make edges appear smoother.

Animation

Aqua makes heavy use of animation
Animation

Animation is the rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement. It is an optical illusion of Motion due to the phenomenon of persistence of vision, and can be created and demonstrated in a number of ways....
. Examples include:
  • Dock icons bounce up and down as their corresponding applications are launched.
  • Dock icons also bounce up and down, in a different rhythm, when a background application requires the user's attention.
  • Dock icons increase in size when approached by the cursor. This feature (called "magnification") is optional.
  • When minimized, windows are "sucked" into the Dock using the "Genie effect" or "Scale effect." Both of the effects are customizable by the user. The former makes a window turn into a curvy shape so it looks like reverse animation of a genie exiting a lamp, and the latter scales down the window until it is small enough to be in the dock. Using the shift key
    Shift key

    The shift key is a modifier key on a alphanumeric keyboard, used to type majuscule and other alternate "upper" characters. There are typically two shift keys, on the left and right sides of the row below the home row....
    , both effects can be seen in slow motion
    Slow motion

    Slow motion or slowmo is an effect in film-making whereby time appears to be slowed down. It was invented by Austrian August Musger. Typically this style is achieved when each film frame is captured at a rate much faster than it will be played back....
    . These keystrokes can also be applied to other Aqua effects such as Dashboard, Exposé
    Exposé (Mac OS X)

    Expos? is a feature of the Mac OS X operating system. First previewed on 23 June 2003 at the Worldwide Developers Conference as a feature of the then forthcoming Mac OS X v10.3, Expos? allows a user to quickly locate an open window, or to hide all windows and show the desktop without the need to click through many windows to find a specific...
     and Front Row. Holding control as well as shift makes the minimize effect take twice as long as just holding shift. There is another undocumented effect called "Suck" which can be enabled by hand editing a configuration file.
  • When a folder on the desktop
    Desktop metaphor

    The desktop metaphor is an interface metaphor which is a set of unifying concepts used by graphical user interfaces to help users more easily interact with the computer....
     is opened or closed, the corresponding Finder window appears to come from, or disappears into, the folder icon.
  • Sheets are "posted" out of Metal, Unified or Leopard window title bars. A dark rectangular slot is drawn on the window so it appears that a dialog box is in fact a sheet of paper being thrust towards the user.
  • Dashboard widgets appear with a "ripple" effect, as if being dropped onto the surface of a pond
    Pond

    A pond is a body of water smaller than a lake, both being examples of terrain feature. Although the term pond is universally used to describe waterbodies that are smaller than lakes, an internationally recognised size cutoff has not yet been agreed, with values ranging from 2 hectares to 8 hectares used to distinguish the smaller from...
    . When removed, Widgets are sucked into the close button as if being drawn into a vacuum.
  • The contents of a stack will appear to spring out from behind the icon when clicked.
  • In the Public Beta of Mac OS X
    Mac OS X Public Beta

    The Mac OS X Public Beta is an early Software testing version of Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system. It was released to the public on September 13 2000 for US$29.95....
    , docked items dragged on to the desktop simply appeared to 'drop' on to the desktop. This behaviour was changed with Mac OS X 10.0; from this release onward items dragged off the dock would 'disappear' in a cartoon-like puff of smoke, an effect which is used in various places in the system (such as Safari's Bookmarks Bar and iPhoto's tag removal).


Many of these effects can be turned off by the user or are only available on supporting hardware.

System integration and standardization

There are a series of Mac OS X features which are standardized across the operating system to make the system more accessible, so the user does not have to learn multiple ways of doing the same thing. Included amongst these features are:
  • Services menu - found in the application menu of most applications, which gives the user access to features of other applications
  • Palettes - Many palettes are repeated across the system, including:
    • Color - The Mac OS X color picker includes multiple ways of choosing colors, including a color wheel, sliders, a wax crayon view, and a "magnifying glass" to select a color from anywhere on the screen
    • Fonts - The Mac OS X font picker gives the user access to advanced typography features like ligatures and shadows in any program which allows the formatting of text,
    • Character Palette - Found as "Special Characters" in the Edit menus of most applications, allows the user to insert characters they are unable to insert with the keyboard
  • Open, Save and Print dialogs - Standard in many applications, and usually use a sheet view


Underlying technology

Aqua is powered by the Quartz Compositor
Quartz Compositor

Quartz Compositor is the windowing system in Mac OS X. It is responsible for presenting and maintaining rasterized, rendered graphics from the rest of the Core Graphics framework and other renderers in the Quartz family....
, the Mac OS X window server.

Litigation

Apple has threatened legal action against those who made themes similar to their look and feel
Look and feel

Look and feel is a term used in descriptions of products and fields such as product design, marketing, branding and trademarking, to describe the main features of its appearance....
.

In particular, the use of various Object Desktop
Object Desktop

The Object Desktop Network is a software subscription service created by Stardock. Users pay an initial fee for access to the software and one year of access to the Object Desktop Network to download updates to their components....
 components created by Stardock
Stardock

Stardock Corporation is a software development company founded in 1991 and incorporation in 1993 as Stardock Systems. Stardock initially developed for the OS/2 platform, but was forced to switch to Microsoft Windows due to the collapse of the OS/2 software market between 1997 and 1998....
 came under fire:
  • WindowBlinds
    WindowBlinds

    WindowBlinds is a computer program that allows users to skin the Microsoft Windows graphical user interface. It has been developed by Stardock since 1998, and is the most popular component of their flagship software suite, Object Desktop....
     skins
    Skin (computing)

    In computing, skins may be associated with theme as custom graphical appearances that can be applied to certain computer software and websites in order to suit the different tastes of different users....
  • DesktopX
    DesktopX

    DesktopX is a shareware desktop enhancement program that allows users to build their own custom desktops. Amongst its features is a complete widget engine for Microsoft Windows as well as a desktop object system....
     themes
  • IconPackager packages that contained Aqua-style icons
  • ObjectDock
    ObjectDock

    ObjectDock is a Dock similar to that in the Aqua Graphical user interface. It is distributed under the Object Desktop brand by Stardock for Windows 2000, Windows 2003, Windows XP and Windows Vista, and comes in Free and Plus versions....


Despite accepting (for the most part) Apple's right to their copyrighted artwork, the skinning community took exception to their heavy-handed actions against all Aqua lookalikes; Stardock
Stardock

Stardock Corporation is a software development company founded in 1991 and incorporation in 1993 as Stardock Systems. Stardock initially developed for the OS/2 platform, but was forced to switch to Microsoft Windows due to the collapse of the OS/2 software market between 1997 and 1998....
's Brad Wardell
Brad Wardell

Bradley R. Wardell , commonly known as Brad Wardell, is an United States businessman and programmer residing in Michigan. He is the founder, current President#Non-governmental presidents, and CEO of Stardock, a software company and Video game company....
 contrasted the company's litigious approach with Microsoft
Microsoft

Microsoft Corporation is a multinational corporation computer technology corporation that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of computer software products for computing devices....
's approach to incorporating third-party skins into Windows XP
Windows XP

Windows XP is a line of operating systems produced by Microsoft for use on personal computers, including home and business desktops, laptop, and media centers....
.

See also

  • Quartz
    Quartz (graphics layer)

    Quartz specifically refers to a pair of Mac OS X technologies, each part of the Core Graphics framework: Quartz 2D and Quartz Compositor. It includes both a 2D renderer in Core Graphics and the composition engine that sends instructions to the graphics card....
  • Exposé
    Exposé (Mac OS X)

    Expos? is a feature of the Mac OS X operating system. First previewed on 23 June 2003 at the Worldwide Developers Conference as a feature of the then forthcoming Mac OS X v10.3, Expos? allows a user to quickly locate an open window, or to hide all windows and show the desktop without the need to click through many windows to find a specific...
  • Dashboard
    Dashboard (software)

    Dashboard is an application for Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X operating systems, used for hosting mini-applications known as Widget engine. First introduced in Mac OS X v10.4, it is a semi-transparent layer that is invisible to the user unless activated by clicking its icon in the Dock....
  • Aero
    Windows Aero

    Windows Aero is the graphical user interface and the default theme in most editions of Windows Vista, an operating system released by Microsoft on 31 January 2007....


External links

  • - Find, publish and rate user experience quirks in Mac OS X
  • – a discussion of brushed metal and Aqua
  • - David Buchan's aqua button tutorial for Photoshop 6