As a colorblind developer, this isn’t really an issue. The vast majority of 
colorblind people can discern colors. As long as the IDE allows you to 
customize which colors it displays, you can find a palette that will work with 
your eyes (for my type of colorblindness, for instance, I have difficulty 
differentiating blue and purple, so I wouldn’t use both in my syntax 
highlighting color scheme). As long as color isn’t the only thing 
differentiating on-screen elements, adding colors to syntax highlighting is 
beneficial even to us colorblind developers. :)


Jeff Kelley

[email protected] | @SlaunchaMan <https://twitter.com/SlaunchaMan> | 
jeffkelley.org <http://jeffkelley.org/>

Check out Developing for Apple Watch, Second Edition 
<https://pragprog.com/titles/jkwatch2/developing-for-apple-watch-second-edition>,
 now in print!

> On May 23, 2016, at 12:24 PM, Krystof Vasa via swift-evolution 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> The problem can also be easily mitigated by having the IDE use a different 
>> color to display a variable based on where it was defined (eclipse come to 
>> mind as an example). This is something the brain naturally notices without 
>> paying any conscious attention.
> 
> Tell that to the colorblind :)
> 
>> 
>>> -- E
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