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I tend to use dark mode on all my computers when the sun goes down. While this makes GitHub more pleasant to read after dark, bright-white images can be blinding. Would you consider replacing mdoc-examples.png with a dark version, or having the browser choose with something like the following?
<picture>
<sourcesrcset='mdoc-examples-dark.png'media='(prefers-color-scheme: dark)'type='image/png'>
<imgsrc='mdoc-examples-light.png'alt='Image of the mdoc-examples.7 man page'>
</picture>
I'd happily supply a pair of my own, but macOS' own manual page displayer is in monochrome, which is surprisingly less interesting than what Gentoo generates.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Well, the colours in that image are mainly the result of the settings of my terminal (kitty), rather than a Gentoo thing - i prefer strong-contrast-black-on-white at all times of day. But i'm certainly happy to change my terminal settings temporarily to generate a 'dark' version, and then try replacing the current line of Markdown referencing that image with some colour-scheme-sensitive HTML.
I tend to use dark mode on all my computers when the sun goes down. While this makes GitHub more pleasant to read after dark, bright-white images can be blinding. Would you consider replacing
mdoc-examples.png
with a dark version, or having the browser choose with something like the following?I'd happily supply a pair of my own, but macOS' own manual page displayer is in monochrome, which is surprisingly less interesting than what Gentoo generates.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: