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&Mike.McBride; &Mike.McBride.mail; &Mark.Donohoe; &Mark.Donohoe.mail; &Martin.R.Jones; &Martin.R.Jones.mail; JohnKnight
anarchist_tomato@herzeleid.net
Conversion to British English
2003-09-22 3.2 KDE KControl colour
Colours Introduction The Colour Selection module is comprised of 4 sections: The colour scheme preview. The current Widget Colour. The available Colour Schemes. The contrast slider. A Widget is a commonly-used programmer's term for referring to User Interface elements such as buttons, menus, and scroll bars. You can think of them as the fundamental pieces that are assembled to make your application. Preview This section of the dialogue demonstrates how a colour scheme applies to a sample selection of widgets. It provides you with a preview of your current colour choices. A colour scheme consists of a set of 18 colours. Each of the widgets is labelled to help you identify how your changes will impact the colour scheme. <guilabel >Widget Colour</guilabel > The currently selected member of the colour scheme is shown in the combo box. This widget colour can be changed by clicking on the coloured box below the combo box. A colour selection dialogue will then appear, from which you may select a new colour. When you are happy with your colour selection, press OK in the colour selection dialogue. The colour will be updated in the Preview Area. You may select any member of the colour scheme from the colour combination box. <guilabel >Contrast</guilabel > Slider The Contrast slider allows you to change the contrast between different shadings of the selected colours. The preview area instantly updates to show the effect of your change. <guilabel >Colour Scheme</guilabel > Various colour schemes are supplied with &kde;, and you are free to define your own. The three major colour components of each scheme are shown beside the name in the list. To preview a scheme in the larger preview area, click on its name in the list box. You can use the &kde;-supplied Colour Schemes as a starting point to devise your own Scheme. Click on the Save Scheme... button to store the colour scheme under a new name, then modify it. When such a user-created Colour Scheme is selected, changes to it (as shown in the Preview) can be saved with the Save Scheme... button; it can also be deleted with the Remove Scheme button. The &kde;-supplied Schemes themselves cannot be changed or deleted. You can use the Import Scheme... button to add new entries to the list. This might be colour schemes that you have created on another computer and saved, or colour schemes you have downloaded from a website. You can choose if you want &kde; to apply the colour scheme even to non-&kde; applications by enabling the Apply colours to non-TDE applications. Not all applications will allow this, but most do.