Re: GNOME Shell Magnifier Inverse (Negative) Feature
- From: Robert Cole <rkcole72984 gmail com>
- To: "gnome-accessibility-list gnome org" <gnome-accessibility-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: GNOME Shell Magnifier Inverse (Negative) Feature
- Date: Tue, 03 Apr 2012 15:26:52 -0700
Thanks for that information about Evince, Juanjo. I was not aware of that.
I have a lot of books in PDF format (I love to read), and this will make
my reading experience under GNOME much more pleasant. I just tested the
CTRL+I key combination, and it worked perfectly.
As far as the High Contrast (Inverse) theme, as mentioned earlier, it
does not alter text entry areas in ,Thunderbird nor does it change the
colors within Firefox. I will have to do a bit of tweaking to change
these settings manually, but that should not be too big of a problem.
Thanks for all of the input.
On 04/03/2012 09:20 AM, Juanjo Marín wrote:
----- Mensaje original -----
De: Joseph Scheuhammer<clown alum mit edu>
Para: gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
CC:
Enviado: Martes 3 de abril de 2012 16:37
Asunto: Re: GNOME Shell Magnifier Inverse (Negative) Feature
Hi Robert, API,
On 02-Apr-2012, Piñeiro wrote:
On 03/30/2012 08:36 PM, Robert Cole wrote:
Hello, everyone.
Hi Robert,
Joseph is the best one to answer some of your questions, but meanwhile I
will answer the others.
I have recently begun to exclusively use Fedora on my desktop system.
I am now running Fedora 16, and I was wondering if there is any way of
testing the inverse feature of the GNOME Shell Magnifier (if it has
yet been implemented)?
Inverse was finished. But the sad news is that due some issues, was not
finished in time to be included on GNOME 3.4, released during this week.
But for sure it will be on 3.6, If you want to know the details, you can
find the bug report here:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639851
The delay is due to a question of which project the inversion code belongs to --
see the related bug report comment here:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=656156#c38.
About if there is any way to test it, this is one of the questions for
Joseph.
I'm currently working on a patch for the latest nightly build of GNOME
Shell, and that should be completed sometime this week. There has been other
interest in adding the inversion to a GNOME 3.4 demo machine, and I'll be
looking into that. The main problem is (and this may not be the correct way to
put it) is how to make an installer of all the bits and pieces. I haven't
the slightest idea how to do that. Anyone know how?
I ask this because I would heavily use the Negative plugin for Compiz.
I don't know why, but it is (and has always been) just so much
easier
for me to read when I have white text on a black background. It takes
me a much longer time to read text when it is normal (black text on a
white background).
Well, you could try to use the high/inverse theme, that can be selected
on the "Universal Access Settings" dialog.
Using the high contrast/inverse theme will get you part of the way there.
However, that doesn't change how web pages are displayed. I suspect it
doesn't change how email clients displays email either. There is probably a
way to set font and background colour preferences within those apps.
As a side note, Evince has a simple built-in "inverse colors" option that you can
find in the view menu. This option can be added it to the toolbar and you have
a default keyboard shortcut/accelerator avalaible, "Ctrl + I" by default in
English, that you can change. The inverse color option is "remembered" by
Evince in a document by document basis.
Cheers,
-- Juanjo Marin
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