> > Problem is this, in TW, I think: how to convert your need into a pallet? >
I don't believe a palette would solve things. if I made TW viewable without FF's inverted colors theme so I could turn off that setting then all other browser tabs would also lose the inverted colors theme so web pages and even FF settings window would display in their original black text on white. FF's theme setting seems to be all or nothing, not adjustable for certain sites (like their user set stylesheets used to be, which I don't believe it has any longer). As for an FF extension to alloqw for on demand theme setting, I gave up on them cause every other day they were getting disabled by FF so they were proving unreliable. The theme issue isn't a matter of user comfort but a necessity-- I lose the color inverting, I lose my ability to work with a computer. TW had worked well with my setup-- use it daily-- I don't really need colors for my personal use. What I do is use Opera (with its dark theme for its UI/chrome) for viewing pages in their original colors if I know they're dark backgrounds-- how I work on my web domain pages, while keeping FF with its color inverting for normal web browsing. I have adjusted to the reality that I will be seeing things in white on black for now on-- I have a specially modified tablet (the Ruby) that lets me read printed material in the same fashion. It has a cam that views a letter or book and displays it as white or yellow text on a black background on its screen. How should we do that? What is the minimal path in TW that might help? > The main thing is that TW applies user OS and browser settings, which is seems to do well, which is why in the TLDR section I advised on not what to do but what not to do that may interfere with what users have already set up for their vision impairment. Most sufferers of vision impairment will already have their systems set up wtih OS accessibilty features or prograqms for being able to use their computer in general. The only problem I noticed with TW is the faded svg icons (like in the edit toolbar) but I don't believe that is so easily addressed since their reduced opacity if linked to function (that they gain full opacity for a hilited effect on mouse over) Now the issue of colors for color coding and color blindness is a whole other can of worms-- I use to do planning documents for an organization that had 3 managers-- each with a different form of color blindness-- which really limited color choices. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/1feae6a8-4e29-4542-88a7-e64ef7102436%40googlegroups.com.

