But think that in consistency in the look of software, is not a bad thing, and something worth aiming for.
Yes, but why italic as well? It is a well-known software convention that greyed-out means clicking here does nothing. The italic style ads no extra information to the user and looks odd. If no other "modern" software does this, I can't understand why Pale Moon does. (Just because that's how Firefox might have done it eons ago, is not a great reason for today.)
Side question. Why can't holding the mouse over the "Edit" label make the extra menu pop-out. Just like the "Print" and "Developer Tools" items do. Of course, I only use the clipboard keyboard shortcuts, but making other users hit the little triangle with the mouse seems unnecessarily difficult.
If there are technical reasons, then it is what it is. All I know is that my screen is 1920 by 1080 which is not unusual, and I am used to (spoilt by?) seeing crisp or at the very least, consistent icons in other programs, with my windows screen at 100%.
To be fair, I never said the default main menu was ugly or anything like that. And also, my replies have largely been in response to several comments in opposition to, or questioning the claim that Pale Moon is "out-dated".
And so I suppose the two-pane, two-tone menu reflects the out-datedness of the Pale Moon interface. I am not saying it is wrong, but seriously, has anybody installed software from the last 10 years or so, that uses this sort of main menu?
I imagine that except for fans of nostalgia, nobody is really expecting to install a browser in 2025 and see something like that. Again, it isn't wrong, but it does offend my design sensibilities when anybody tries to claim that the default Pale Moon look doesn't give off strong outdated vibes.




