Re: Opacity of Menus
Re: Opacity of Menus
- Subject: Re: Opacity of Menus
- From: Keith Wilson <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 21 Dec 2007 15:34:40 +1100
Hi William
Thanks for the pointer to Universal Access - your reply was helpful
and sympathetic - but I cannot see where it allows the user to change
the opacity (muddiness) of a contextual pop-up menu.
I know what I (and my customers) need/want - and that is the ability
to reset the alpha component for the background of a contextual pop-up
menu. So far everyone is trying to read the rule book to me. If Apple
had stuck to the rule book then they would not have been able to
provide us with all those wonderful innovations over the past 20
something years. I am not trying to innovate anything here - I just
want to allow the user to make the appropriate setting for the alpha
component in a preferences panel - what wrong with that?. If someone
wants to extend the argument to an option for the main menu bar then
please do it on another thread.
Keith
On 21/12/2007, at 2:24 PM, William Turner wrote:
If the issue is visual accessibility, your customers (or anyone who
has such concerns) can use the Universal Access section of System
Preferences to control contrast or even switch to White on Black.
This provides a "Universal" experience - maintaining a consistent
look and feel across every application, without need for customizing
context menus within an application.
I use it myself, on those long days of staring at the screen...
Wil
On Dec 20, 2007, at 7:05 PM, Keith Wilson wrote:
I want to give my customers the choice of how THEY want their
screen to look and feel - if they want context menu opacity =
0.95, 1.00 or whatever... then they should be allowed to set
their own preference.
But at the moment I do not have the tools to do this for contextual
pop-up menus.
Keith
On 21/12/2007, at 1:52 PM, John Stiles wrote:
Why exactly is this more pertinent to your particular application
than, say, Microsoft Word or Photoshop, where the sheets and menus
look like a regular app?
Making your app different than a regular app is never a good
thing, not for you or your customers.
Now, if you wanted to design some sort of hack that made all
sheets and menus for every application opaque, at least things
would be consistent :)
Keith Wilson wrote:
Apple has done something bad. A substantial number of my
customers belong to "the older and wiser" generation and they do
not all still have 20/20 vision so they need the screen to be
crisp and clear. I expect that Apple will sooner or later fix
this problem by exposing the alpha component of context menus to
us developers but in the meantime I need a fix, which is what I'm
looking for on this forum.
Keith
On 21/12/2007, at 12:15 PM, Michael Watson wrote:
I'd rather not see developers make sheets and menus
inconsistent. I don't think Apple's done anything bad here by
not exposing this to you directly.
If you and your customers have a problem with standard system-
wide interface practices, you should all file issues with Apple
instead of wrenching the UI into something out of place for your
application.
--
m-s
On 20 Dec, 2007, at 19:21, Keith Wilson wrote:
PS: It would be so nice if Mr Apple man would let us
programmers set the opacity without having to go through the
tradesmen's entrance, but c'est la vie, .... where there is a
will there must be a way.
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