At the time of this writing, in dark mode, the regular text has much higher contrast against the site background than --theme-post-title-color
does.
The current values are:
color: #E7E9EB
--theme-content-background-color
->var(--white): #2d2d2d
--theme-post-title-color
->var(--theme-link-color)
->--blue-600: #33a7ff
Links to WebAIM:
- For regular text contrast
- contrast ratio: 11.31:1
- For
--theme-post-title-color
contrast- contrast ratio: 5.32:1
I found that when going through the review queues, people tend to put the main/basic question in the title, and not duplicate the basic question in the question body, but rather only put elaboration there. I have no problem with this.
What I find nonideal is that my eyes get easily drawn immediately to the question body over the question title, because the body's contrast is so much higher, which is a little frustrating—or at least counterintuitive, since I will usually only understand the question body by first reading the title.
Yes, this is easily solved by "just exert that iota of effort to read the title first", but I think it would be much better if the contrast ratios were more similar, so that I wouldn't have to fight against what my brain naturally does.
Perhaps that means brightening --theme-post-title-color
. Perhaps that means darkening the default color
. --theme-post-title-color
is probably the less controversial choice, since the default color is the default color for the whole site.
Interestingly, --theme-post-title-color-visited
uses --theme-link-color-visited
, which is --blue-700
. I found this to be satisfactory in being more similar in contrast-ratio with the regular text color. Edit: I just found that a discussion already exists about this
Aside: I also thought it was curious since generally in light mode, it seems like the de facto style is to make visited links darker so that they stand out less. So it seems strange that in dark mode, stackoverflow.com makes them stand out more—not that I have any actual reason to think that's a bad thing—it just stood out as not very normal, but this is besides the point of this thread.