> When a non-opaque scene fill color is used with a stage style other than > `StageStyle.TRANSPARENT`, the actual fill color is always white. This doesn't > work well when the scene uses a dark color scheme. A practical solution is to > allow non-opaque scene fill colors, and blend them on top of a white or black > background (depending on color scheme) to derive an opaque color that adapts > intuitively to the color scheme. > > To test this, simply create a scene that uses a non-opaque fill color and > observe the scene background when the color scheme is changed. > > This PR includes a system test, run it with: > > ./gradlew -PFULL_TEST=true -PUSE_ROBOT=true :systemTests:test --tests > test.robot.javafx.scene.SceneFillTest.testSceneFill
Michael Strauß has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision: import ------------- Changes: - all: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/2068/files - new: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/2068/files/2f66dd9b..cc69cad5 Webrevs: - full: https://webrevs.openjdk.org/?repo=jfx&pr=2068&range=06 - incr: https://webrevs.openjdk.org/?repo=jfx&pr=2068&range=05-06 Stats: 1 line in 1 file changed: 1 ins; 0 del; 0 mod Patch: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/2068.diff Fetch: git fetch https://git.openjdk.org/jfx.git pull/2068/head:pull/2068 PR: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/2068
