https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=71511

--- Comment #3 from [email protected] ---
> Potential duplicate of bug 64842.
Yes, this does look like a potential duplicate. But since bug 64842 was filed
against Ubuntu and not Windows, I wouldn't be sure that the fix for that one
would fix the similar problem on windows. The offending code for each OS may be
slightly different.

I've read the comment for change Ia42ca7882f0d2dd1f2a304db5e4b5aaba23244fc.
This change introduces a serious accessibility flaw for folk with a vision
disability. I can no longer use later versions of LibreOffice because of this.
As a developer myself, I would have said that a better fix for the problem
would have been to correctly detect when Open Office / LibreOffice has been set
to work in accessibility mode and when so, for the displayed document colours
to inherit from the underlying high-contrast theme accordingly. When
LibreOffice is not in set in accessibility mode, then by all means default to
other more appropriate display colours for the document.

It appears the developer of the patch may misunderstand why (at least in
Windows) the High-Contrast themes exist and how visually impaired people like
myself benefit from them.

Various partially sighted or blind people and folk with other visual
impairments benefit from a custom text foreground and page background colours.
Setting the host OS to a high-contrast accessibility theme should trigger all
applications to inherit that theme. There are of course some offending
applications in Windows that don't this, but most do. Open Office / LibreOffice
has been particularly good at this in the past - and has been especially useful
to people with a vision disability with it's ability to adapt to document
display colours accordingly when accessibility is set to on (this is now
broken). This has been singly the biggest winning feature for which why I
choose OpenOffice/LibreOffice over Word.

I suffer from a light sensitivity disorder called Visual Stress for which white
/ light backgrounds on paper and computer screens cause considerable discomfort
and migraines. This disorder affects 15 - 20 percent of the population at
varied levels of severity from very mild to extreme. Is is also known as
Meares-Irlen Syndrome or just Irlen Syndrome. Colour is of extreme importance
for these people to be able to see and read comfortably. We rely on
high-contrast OS themes to get around the problem to some extent. White
background documents and UIs cause these people a multitude of debilitating
symptoms including migraines, not being able to think straight, loss of some
co-ordination, irritability, nausea and quite a few others - different for each
individual.

Please honour high-contrast themes in Windows. They are there for a reason.

In sort, please restore LibreOffice's ability to adhere a document's displayed
colours to the underlying high-contrast theme, when the applicable
accessibility settings have been set in the application's preferences.

-- 
You are receiving this mail because:
You are the assignee for the bug.
_______________________________________________
Libreoffice-bugs mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice-bugs

Reply via email to