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by singingboyo
3080 days ago
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OT: Do dark but high-contrast themes have the same issues? I ask because, just to reduce eye strain in the other direction, I avoid bright screens where possible. Probably a side effect of often doing things late or even at normal times during winter. In any case, if I ever built a website it'd probably be dark-ish, but knowing about the pitfalls might help avoid them. Even more off-topic, but in the interest of eyesight stuff - both switching between light/dark and dealing with bright screens have been basically unnoticeable since getting blue-filter coating on my glasses. Not sure I'd recommend it for color-sensitive work, but it's not problematic at all for programming and stuff like that. |
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As I mentioned in another comment, I've found that many laptop screens have a pronounced blue-green cast out of the box. The worst ones we have here are a late 2013 MacBook Pro Retina and a ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 2 WQHD. These both are difficult to look at with the factory calibration, especially the X1 Yoga which I found literally painful to use in the first part of the Windows setup, before calibrating the display. Everything was an intense green that felt like it was burning my eyes. I can see why someone using a display like that might prefer a dark theme, just to knock out that awful blue-green.
But after I calibrated the display to a pure white, it looked beautiful, just like our other calibrated high-DPI displays.
One other benefit to calibrating displays is when using multiple displays. I use a 24" 4K/UHD display in portrait mode along with whichever laptop I'm using at the moment. (A portrait mode display plus a landscape display is a wonderful combination, for example an entire PDF page fits on the portrait display with no scrolling.) Having the colors look the same on both displays - especially the white backgrounds - makes things much more pleasing to the eye.
To your question about high-contrast dark themes, yes, I have the same trouble with those. Dark themes just don't work for me, nor do low-contract themes, whether dark or light.