I found that I had to override it the forceful way though, which had some side effects… like, links which used to be white turned blue. And I found it seemed a little too bright. So, for me personally I think I’ll stick with the un-styled links (inherit the default style from BLF instead of overriding).
In any case, it’s at that link and the one-line change is tagged with DanielM if you want to find it or modify it.
Finally themed the tab widgets, like at the top of the account settings.
No more weird wrapping on the private message thread pager.
Less obnoxious “Tag this conversation” widget.
Shadows on links to increase contrast, instead of making the text color brighter.
That last one is probably the most noticeable. It showed me a few things I didn’t realize were clickable before, like in the commercial sellers’ rules:
I haven’t tried, but I don’t see why not. If it can run the Stylish extension, it should be able to do this.
…
So, I looked it up. I’m seeing “May 14, 2015: Google Chrome for Android will not be getting extension support any time soon, Chrome developers say …”
However, it seems to work on Firefox on Android. After installing Stylish, I told it to get styles from userstyles.org, searched for “BLF”, and then followed the links to install it.
As it says in the first post:
To use this, install the “Stylish” extension, then search the userstyles.org repository for “BLF” and follow the instructions there.
Hey ToyKeeper! Is there any way to make this work in IE? I know code writers don’t like IE but I just can’t get myself to like Chrome no matter how hard I try. If not I’ll try to figure something else out. Or maybe I’ll use Chrome just for BLF if I have to but it will be with great reluctance.
It looks like M4D M4X explicitly set a background color on each link in that list… or set it once and copy/pasted it a bunch of times. The first half of the list has styled links, while the second half has styled spans. And a few items are bare.
I can override it, but it’s kind of a violation of scope. It would prevent anyone from ever setting a background color in the text of their posts. At least, in links or spans.
So, what do you think? Should it override style mis-uses (and also override normal uses too), or should it allow both (and give us an occasional hard-to-read post like that one)?