> On Sept. 25, 2013, 8:40 p.m., Albert Astals Cid wrote: > > I'm again confused, isn't the idea that we respect the colors specified on > > the file? Or not? Jaydeep, what's the final decision we took? > > Christoph Feck wrote: > Albert, the issue is that some documents do not indicate text color, they > just assume. > > Albert Astals Cid wrote: > Right, so if they assume and we follow the color scheme, all is nice, no? > You'll get your weird black on red as defined on your color scheme? Or that's > something we don't like and we want it to be black on white not obeying your > color scheme? > > Christoph Feck wrote: > Yes, you can follow the color scheme, but then you have to do it for both > background and foreground. But right now, Okular uses a white background. > > In the description I explained why I think following the color scheme > might be bad: If you follow the color scheme, then you can break (i.e. render > invisible) documents that _do_ set text colors, especially for users that use > a dark color scheme. > > Of course, a third option would be to ignore all colors in the document, > and force both background and foreground to use the color scheme, but then > "colorful" documents would look boring.
Why would someone set the text color and not the background color? Does that happen? - Albert ----------------------------------------------------------- This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit: http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/111681/#review40816 ----------------------------------------------------------- On Aug. 20, 2013, 10:40 a.m., Christoph Feck wrote: > > ----------------------------------------------------------- > This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit: > http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/111681/ > ----------------------------------------------------------- > > (Updated Aug. 20, 2013, 10:40 a.m.) > > > Review request for Okular. > > > Description > ------- > > As indicated in bug 322547, some documents do not specify a text color, and > probably assume the default text color to be black. QTextDocument, however, > defaults to using the system text color. > > This patch changes the default text color to Qt::black. It should affect > epub, fb2, odt, and plain text generators. > > I think it is better to use this approach instead of changing the paper color > to use the system background color (see bug 253583), because > > 1) the document might specify a text color in some places, > > 2) the user is able to change the fg/bg colors anyway using Okular's > Accessibility options, and those probably expect black on white. > > > This addresses bugs 253583 and 322547. > http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=253583 > http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=322547 > > > Diffs > ----- > > core/textdocumentgenerator.cpp b260b3f > > Diff: http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/111681/diff/ > > > Testing > ------- > > I tested the document from bug 322547 comment #3. > > > Thanks, > > Christoph Feck > >
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