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Maybe it's something that would help my 76 year old eyes.
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It really saves me eye strain, but the contrast has to be stark. These sites with dark theme and gray lettering are really hard to read. I'm 72 and I spend a lot of time in front 9of the monitor so I favor the darker themes.
The less you need, the more you have.
Even a blind squirrel gets a nut...occasionally.
JaxCoder.com
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I use the IntelliJ IDE. It has a high contrast dark theme, where dark areas (background) are totally black and fonts can be configured to bright colors of your liking. I love it!
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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Thanks for sharing.
TOMZ_KV
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I do a lot of my coding at night, and the dark theme is much easier on the eyes. Plus running on a 55" 4k screen, all white tends to just be a lot of light.
Real programmers use butterflies
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55" 4k? I assume you'll not sit too close to it.
TOMZ_KV
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Ehhh. I don't know what too close is. It's not backlit, it's QLED so it's not as bad as older screens.
Real programmers use butterflies
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QLED is backlit. But it uses LEDs for backlight as opposed to vacuum tube lamps.
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Oh. I did not know that. I thought LED screens didn't need backlight.
Real programmers use butterflies
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They need it because LEDs are bright. If you don't backlight the screen you would get bright colors much more aggressive on your eyes and bleeding out in the neighboring dark pixels, creating artifacts and glares on a pixel by pixel basis.
So you keep a backlight and lower the intensity of the LEDs. A non backlit LED screen with a dark mode would look like a lot of pinpricks slammed in your eyeballs.
GCS d--(d-) s-/++ a C++++ U+++ P- L+@ E-- W++ N+ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE- Y+ PGP t+ 5? X R+++ tv-- b+(+++) DI+++ D++ G e++ h--- r+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
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Nostalgia... I was a ZX Spectrum kid.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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8 bits then and 64 bits now. Increased by 8 times. Not really advanced a lot considering 40 years computing history.
TOMZ_KV
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A white background is better for my eyes these days.
Bright-colored text and graphics (not images) moving on a black screen causes me headaches.
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I cannot get used to a dark theme either.
TOMZ_KV
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Kind Regards Just yesterday I set the text background to a yellow color similar to here I find it rather soothing after long use of Blue Theme in Visual Studio I also have difficulty tolerating dark theme though it appears impressive - _Cheerio_
My sympathies to the SPAM moderator
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Been using the dark theme for a long time now, I can't imagine going back to the light one, it's a bit hard on the eyes now. Besides, light attracts bugs :P
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Jacquers wrote: Besides, light attracts bugs
Biologically true. Programmatically true too?
TOMZ_KV
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Just glad we don't use CRTs anymore. The blue background of the Turbo Pascal IDE couldn't have been great for my eyes.
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My memory of Turbo Pascal was yellow text on a black background, which I quite liked. I set Turbo C up to be the same. I do find dark themes work well for me, though.
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As with most things, the answer is "it depends"
I find light-on-dark easier to read most of the time, but have recently written a small systray app to switch the overall windows theme between light and dark (and much of my software follows) so that when I'm working outside (which I've started doing because the weather is quite pleasant), I switch to a light theme, to be able to see what's on my screen more effectively.
There are some points to ponder in this discussion though, including plain-old-preference and light sensitivity (I find bright colors on the screen to be rather harsh - even light outside can be a little much sometimes, but I feel like I adjust to it better once I'm actually out there - so perhaps it's more of a contrast issue)
------------------------------------------------
If you say that getting the money
is the most important thing
You will spend your life
completely wasting your time
You will be doing things
you don't like doing
In order to go on living
That is, to go on doing things
you don't like doing
Which is stupid.
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Dark theme for dark environments, light theme for light environments.
But you really shouldn't work in a dark environment.
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People get older. White light dazzles because when you are no longer young, the vitreous humor of the eye is disorganized and manifests halos in the presence of intense light and filaments that seem to fly.
Adopting a dark theme minimizes the effects of an eye that is no longer perfect. The programmers who are no longer very young, those with the experience necessary to manage non-trivial projects, are getting older and older.
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