Thank you for taking the time to enable this using stylish for Firefox. I will endorse as soon as this site allows me to do so.
I would like to request a simplified tutorial if that is possible on how to achieve creating or changing the style's colours a bit, to help me with my color blindness issues etc, I have issues with certain colors, but most particularly with contrast issues, I personally need higher contrast or I just can't read text at all.
Anyway, even if a tutorial is not possible, I wholeheartedly wish to THANK YOU for sharing this modification with the rest of us!
Sorry to hear that, I know someone with color blindness and I can hear him right now "not everyone sees color the same!"
If you want to learn how to use Stylish in general, check out the Wiki. You'll need general knowledge of CSS, but it's easy to learn. You can even start by downloading one of my styles, then Edit it in Stylish to see what you can achieve!
The way I build styles is by right clicking an element on a page, then choosing Inspect Element. This will open DEV TOOLS in your browser with that element selected. You can then change it's CSS properties in the right-hand panel. Once I get something the way I want it, I then copy those properties into the Stylish sheet and save it so it becomes permanent (when I have Stylish turned on).
With Stylebot (Chrome only add-on) it's a little easier because it includes its own Inspect Element tool which cuts out a few steps, but I prefer Stylish now for the cross-browser support.
In either case, you'll be learning how CSS works in the browser. It's sweeter than a sweet roll!
That's it! Additionally, I want to provide the way I make minor changes to CSS with no particular knowledge about it: I use software like "Just Color Picker", then "pick" the color of the element I want to change (sometimes zooming in is helpful), copy its value, open the style in Stylish, search for the value and finally replace it with something more enjoyable. It doesn't always work, but it's a start.
And thank you, hectavex, for these styles. I remember checking out userstyles.org sometime ago on styles for the nexus, but wasn't able to find any. Right now I don't have Stylish installed, but as soon as I change that I'll try the dark one. Both look really nice.
Have you tried Stylish for Firefox? I might need to fix some of the vendor prefixes for Firefox though (add -moz prefixes where I'm using the -webkit prefixes). Let me know!
I wouldn't even attempt it unless this worked for it since this would be the only reason I would have to try it. I really don't like the Nexus layout and this intrigued me. Honestly, I didn't even know such things existed for Firefox and expected a "Get Chrome scrub!" response.
I would also like to request a FireFox version. CSS files should be cross browser compatible, at least I thought that was the idea behind CSS to begin with? I would also prefer this light version vs a dark version. Too dark a screen makes it difficult for me to navigate as it is.
Thank you for taking the time to create this, even if I can't use it currently.
Firefox version in the works. CSS is cross browser, that's the idea, but when it comes to newer standards like CSS3, not all browsers are up to speed. Firefox still does not implement CSS3 filters when the other browsers do. I'm hoping they catch up with Chrome because I like having more choices when it comes to web development.
21 comments
I would like to request a simplified tutorial if that is possible on how to achieve creating or changing the style's colours a bit, to help me with my color blindness issues etc, I have issues with certain colors, but most particularly with contrast issues, I personally need higher contrast or I just can't read text at all.
Anyway, even if a tutorial is not possible, I wholeheartedly wish to THANK YOU for sharing this modification with the rest of us!
If you want to learn how to use Stylish in general, check out the Wiki. You'll need general knowledge of CSS, but it's easy to learn. You can even start by downloading one of my styles, then Edit it in Stylish to see what you can achieve!
The way I build styles is by right clicking an element on a page, then choosing Inspect Element. This will open DEV TOOLS in your browser with that element selected. You can then change it's CSS properties in the right-hand panel. Once I get something the way I want it, I then copy those properties into the Stylish sheet and save it so it becomes permanent (when I have Stylish turned on).
With Stylebot (Chrome only add-on) it's a little easier because it includes its own Inspect Element tool which cuts out a few steps, but I prefer Stylish now for the cross-browser support.
In either case, you'll be learning how CSS works in the browser. It's sweeter than a sweet roll!
And you're welcome.
I use software like "Just Color Picker", then "pick" the color of the element I want to change (sometimes zooming in is helpful), copy its value, open the style in Stylish, search for the value and finally replace it with something more enjoyable. It doesn't always work, but it's a start.
And thank you, hectavex, for these styles. I remember checking out userstyles.org sometime ago on styles for the nexus, but wasn't able to find any. Right now I don't have Stylish installed, but as soon as I change that I'll try the dark one. Both look really nice.
Thank you for taking the time to create this, even if I can't use it currently.
just kidding
This is cool and something new, I like it