View Single Post
Old 07-03-2011, 04:45 PM   #9
jshzh
Addict
jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.jshzh could sell banana peel slippers to a Deveel.
 
Posts: 320
Karma: 3394
Join Date: Aug 2009
Device: Pocketbook 602 Pro, Kobo Aura HD, LG G Pad III
Quote:
Originally Posted by paola View Post
if you have Adobe Pro, you could try this: go into Edit\preferences\accessibility. There are various options on enhanced contrast there that you could try (including changing the document to white on black).

EDIT: you could make the changes even with acrobat Reader, but you wouldn't be able to save the changed file.

I just tried with Adobe Pro 9 Extended, paola, black on white, white on white, and yellow on black...But they all display exactly the same contrast on Adobeviewer. It is a colored text. On computer screen there are only two colors (my new setting) but on PB there are still three colors, the original black is grey, the colored text is light grey, and the greyish screen...White on black displays the same way as black on white.

Maybe because the Adobeviewer has 16 scales of grey? The only way works for me so far is to change the stroke width.

Last edited by jshzh; 07-03-2011 at 04:49 PM.
jshzh is offline   Reply With Quote