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Dark vs Light 'theme' on Mac OS (by Nigel)
Greetings from sunny South Africa :-)
Just getting started with 3D printing and understand benefits of being able to design own models. To this end have been trying a number of CAD applications (poor Internet connectivity rules out cloud based options) and like what I see with SolveSpace, EXCEPT the dark theme...
Have searched for a configuration file or a setting but none found, is it possible to switch display to a 'light' theme?
Many thanks in advance.
Just getting started with 3D printing and understand benefits of being able to design own models. To this end have been trying a number of CAD applications (poor Internet connectivity rules out cloud based options) and like what I see with SolveSpace, EXCEPT the dark theme...
Have searched for a configuration file or a setting but none found, is it possible to switch display to a 'light' theme?
Many thanks in advance.
(no subject) (by Tom)
In the line styles tab, you can change the default colors plus the background color. There unfortunately doesn't seem to be any way to export that, so you have to make the changes one at a time instead of loading a whole new theme.
Dark vs Light 'theme' on Mac OS (by Nigel)
Hi Tom, thanks for suggestion.
Given my lack of experience and what appears to be a overly complex procedure (compared to a simple light / dark selection), I will live with default configuration and use time becoming proficient at using SolveSpace!
Given my lack of experience and what appears to be a overly complex procedure (compared to a simple light / dark selection), I will live with default configuration and use time becoming proficient at using SolveSpace!
(no subject) (by Tom)
I might have made it sound harder than it is. You just click a style and change the color, and you'll see the effect immediately. Worst case, you can revert with the "factory defaults" link at the bottom. The changes will apply to all files, so you only have to do it once.
(no subject) (by Nigel)
Aha, easy when you know how (and navigate to correct location!).
Thanks Tom.
Thanks Tom.
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