On 28 Jul 2022 as I do recall, Mouse wrote: > >> [I tried netsurf]. As I have, unfortunately, come to expect from > >> almost everything, it defaulted to reverse video. [...] > > > [default CSS] To be honest I don't know that this would override the > > colours set up in the page [...] > > I wouldn't expect default CSS to override the page's colours. That's > what defaults are all about, after all.
I can't think of any other way of doing it in Netsurf (and I didn't test that suggestion, so I don't even know if it would have worked anyway....) > (I wouldn't even _want_ to override the page's colours, except that > most pages actively specify reverse-video colours. I don't understand > why.) So by 'reverse video' you mean DTP-style display, with dark text on a white page? Yes, that is the default for everything other than terminal-style screens (which I now understand is what you are trying to emulate). StrongED (bitmap display text editor) used to have a special 'inverse video' light-on-dark colour option to emulate the old BBC Micro programming display, but I can't even find that option in the latest versions, and I don't know of any other application that offers it - RISC OS has been using cream/white/grey backgrounds with lines drawn over them as the default for all user interfaces since the desktop first came in circa 1990, and it has never been terminal-based, so I'm afraid applications originating in RISC OS simply don't take that type of display into account. :-( [snip] > The "make it usable" part needs, of course, to have a "for me" > qualifier attached; I had assumed that was implicitly understood here, > as of course it should be for pretty much any user-usability issue. I > suspect most people have become accustomed to having large areas of > bright on their screens. Maybe they like eyestrain? [Only half > sarcastic....] I find that fine white lines against a dark background tend to dance before my eyes - particularly obvious when graphics designers use this style on printed pages (and even worse of course when they do it on a *textured* background, which may look good on their monitors but is all but unreadable in a colour magazine), but I just generated an HTML page of Lorem ipsum using a white-on-black colour scheme, and it's pretty hard to read in Netsurf. It probably depends on your OS/monitor set-up. > Of course, it doesn't matter much what the defaults are, as long as > it's easy to change them. It's the changing-them part that led me to > write to the list. Unfortunately I'm pretty sure Netsurf doesn't offer any mechanism to force HTML pages to change their colour scheme. It doesn't offer all that many customisations anyway (you can't even tell it not to load images, so far as I'm aware). I think it was mainly written to be small and fast, rather than highly flexible. So there probably isn't any way of getting it to meet your needs. (Though I'm not a developer and don't know what is actually possible!) -- Harriet Bazley == Loyaulte me lie == He who hesitates is last. _______________________________________________ netsurf-users mailing list -- netsurf-users@netsurf-browser.org To unsubscribe send an email to netsurf-users-le...@netsurf-browser.org