If you use SVG for drawing the steps and CSS for styling their (and a
recent browser for viewing), you can provide two or more stylesheets, one
for printing, one for screen, etc.for diagrams, exactly for webpage layout.

Best,
A.

Aurèle Duda
artiste plasticien
plieur de papier

http://aureleduda.com
[email protected]
+33 (0)6 98 37 29 52
Montigny-lès-Metz - France

2014-10-24 8:18 GMT+02:00 Aurèle Duda <[email protected]>:

> If you use SVG for drawing the steps and CSS for styling their (and a
> recent browser for viewing), you can provide two or more stylesheets, one
> for printing, one for screen, etc.for diagrams, exactly for webpage layout.
>
> Best,
> A.
>
> Aurèle Duda
> artiste plasticien
> plieur de papier
>
> http://aureleduda.com
> [email protected]
> +33 (0)6 98 37 29 52
> Montigny-lès-Metz - France
>
> 2013-12-12 20:01 GMT+01:00 Sy Chen <[email protected]>:
>
>> Personally, I do not like reading diagram on the computer screen. I am
>> not sure the black background would make it better. I just read an
>> article about inverting your browser color:
>>
>>
>> http://lifehacker.com/5912480/how-to-invert-your-browsers-colors-for-easier-reading-at-night
>>
>> I found some useful tricks:
>> :
>> Mac users: Command + Option + Control + 8 (big PLUS for iUsers)
>> Windows users: Built-in Magnifer (several steps to setup) or  f.lux
>> (http://justgetflux.com/, I haven't tried it)
>> The suggested browser solution (Firefox, Chrome extension) will not
>> work for viewing embedded image or pdf files.
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Sy
>>
>
>

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