> A lot of it depends on the monitor and its brightness/contrast (aka > hardware) settings, and on the configured gamma. > That could be, I have two monitors in use with this system (internal laptop and external LCD) and one is mearly difficult to see with, not impossible like the other. > Dotan, have you tried fiddling with "The application formerly known as > kcontrol" (generically aka system settings, tho it's really kde settings > and has little to do with the rest of the system, so kcontrol is more > accurate /and/ less generic), Computer admin, Display, Gamma? > Regarding the System Settings name, please comment on this bug: https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=199326 I do not want to alter the gamma as I have a fix (use a different theme's scrollbars). > According to the kgamma handbook (khelpcenter), the defaults are 1.00 X, > 1.80 Mac, 2.20 MSWormOS (my name for it, FWIW). If you haven't done the > calibration, go ahead and do it, following the procedure outlined in the > kgamma handbook. On my LCDs, I ended up with an RGB gamma of 1.25 red > and green, 1.65 blue. That /dramatically/ improved the contrast at the > dark end of things, for me. Note that CRTs will likely come out with far > different numbers, and there's all sorts of other factors involved as > well, from the backlite (florescent or LED) on LCDs and possible screen > coatings on CRTs, to typical ambient lighting conditions, to make and > model of monitor, to specific monitor on the same production run, to > personal preference, to... > > That will make a big difference, or at least it did here. > > As for changing the scrollbar specifically, that's controlled by look and > feel, appearance, colors, but there's not an individual setting for it. > After your gamma is set correctly, you may want to tweak the colors a bit > anyway. > > Here, I have a STRONG preference for light foregrounds/text, dark > backgrounds, AND for way more color than the wimpy/sickly default mostly- > grays so I started by finding a scheme that came at least reasonably > close to meeting my needs. Of the default kde themes, Obsidian Coast and > Wonton Soup came closest, being at least light on dark, but they were > still way too sickly weak for my tastes. kdelook to the rescue! =:^) > The best one I found there was darkblue-deb, a theme Debian may ship, > apparently, or at least a Debian fan created! =:^) > Thanks, I will take a look at that. > But it wasn't /exactly/ right, either, tho it came reasonably close. So > I had to tweak it a bit. > > If you are going to do *any* color tweaking on your own, besides changing > the schemes, you **NEED** to read the associated help page. If you > don't, you will not understand what you are doing, and will likely get > /something/ wrong, such that you'll get a dialog or tooltip text or > /something/, with "invisible" text (or invisible thumb buttons on the > scrollbar, as in this thread, etc), simply due to not paying attention to > how the various color sets and color roles combine, in some cases with > automatic settings based on the others. After Mathew and I hashed things > out on this list a couple versions ago, the color settings dialog is > /much/ improved over what it was, but kde4 has an incredibly rich and > complex color layout, WAY more complex than kde3, and if you don't read > that help text, you WILL miss some of the nuances and very likely screw > /something/ up. > > That said, the most important point to remember is to check any changes > you make in the preview. Note that on the colors tab, choosing any color > set other than the default "common colors" from the dropdown, you get a > more detailed preview of how the various roles of that color set in their > normal and alternate state look. If ANY of those words don't have enough > foreground/background contrast to easily read the words, you WILL have > problems when the associated color set and role comes up. Thus, if you > can't read any of those words, you better go back and tweak your colors > some more! > > One other detail to note! The Oxygen style (kcontrol, look&feel, > appearance, styles) does button gradients/hilites that the other styles > don't do. I don't know the precise algorithm behind it, and the effect > only seems to be noticeable if the button color is dark enough so many > probably won't see it at all, but if your chosen button background color > is dark enough and you're running Oxygen style, you should notice a > definite difference between the button background color you set in > colors, and the actual button background color as shown on the system -- > the color will be the same hue, but lighter than the color selected in > the color settings dialog, due to the Oxygen button hiliting effect. > FWIW, once I realized that, after a bit of experimentation, I settled on > a very very dark red (with an even smaller touch of green, #140800), so > dark many people would call it black, as the button normal background > setting. The hiliting effect lightens it to a dark (but not black) > brown, which sets off nicely against the window and view background blues > of darkblue-deb, as well as the bright yellow I chose (another mod from > darkblue-deb) as my button text color. However, during the > experimentation I tried green as well, and noted the same lightening > effect there. I expect that blue would have it as well, but didn't test > that since with window and view normal backgrounds already dark blue > (from darkblue-deb), dark-blue buttons wouldn't show up so well! > > Meanwhile, the precise color settings controlling the scrollbar are > window normal background, for the scrollbar background, and button normal > background, for the scroll button. Again, be sure and check your > previews when you change them tho, ensuring that all the text roles still > show up as sufficiently readable, and if you're running Oxygen style and > have a dark button normal background, consider the effect when it's > lightened a bit due to that hiliting, when you check those previews! > Would you mind sending to me your modified colour scheme. It sounds like I could learn a lot from it. Thanks! -- Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.