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I thought I would love the new Dark Mode in L9, because I have dark mode on my tablet and phone, the color chime on my PC is dark and these color schemes are just much easier on my eyes. I also prefer lower light areas to read e-books, so dark mode works much better. So why do I not like L9’s Dark Mode? Because it is GRAY. This is a similar problem
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Hi Daniel! Thanks for the reply. First, I want to say that prior to 9, I’ve not used the Sermon Editor/Builder. So, I am on training wheels here. Second, when I preach my sermons, I always outline and speak extemporaneously, except for Bible references and quotations. If I print my outline and bring a Bible, then all I need to do is list the reference
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Thanks for the response Graham. I guess the best way to describe it is pretty simple. I type in a Bible text in Sermon Builder. It creates a Hyperlink. I got into "Preach" mode. On my iPad, the link goes nowhere--literally, nothing happens. IN the Desktop version, It tries to open a tiny URL, but doesn't actually open the text, and rather than going
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Am I the only who who thinks that listing a reference to a Biblical Text in Sermon Builder should allow one to simply click on that link when preaching the sermon to bring up the actual text of the Bible? This could also work for quoting from other resources, as well. I guess I thought that would be the standard usage, since typing in a Bible reference
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Friends, In general, I prefer a dark mode when doing a lot of work on my computer, as it does ease the eyes. However, I wish the dark mode was "as simple as" white on black. I see this throughout the internet in which websites are using "non-black" and "non-white" fonts and backgrounds. For example, a website with an ivory background and light gray
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Hey! I’m no quitter!
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When I use that keyboard shortcut - nothing happens. It retains my old bookmarks. How is this "supposed" to work?
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This has nothing to do with monitors or font scaling or anything else. I guess my questoin going into this is, "Why change the font color in the first place?" If we are able to change our fonts for resources, why not have thsoe same defaults for our Notes? I have a few other minor complaints about hte Notes that I am able to fumble through, but this
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In my Logos it is gray. And, others have this same complaint. Again, all other resources open with a black font, it just does not make any sense to have the Notes default to a gray font. Not to mention that it is more difficult to read. To my eyes, the font color makes the words seem “fuzzy”, because compared to all the other resources,
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Can we change the default font color to black, please? Or at least allow us to set the default color ourselves. All other resources have a default color of black, so it is odd to have Notes default to gray. This seems to be a common complaint, and this fix cannot be terribly complicated. Please fix this at your earliest opportunity.
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OK - So I thought I had avoided this problem, somehow, but today when I added another note, the following happened repeatedly: If I select the entire content of a Note, change the font to a different font, size and color (instead of the gray), when I hit enter to go to a new line, the "Default font" returns and I am now typing again in gray (and a different
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First, I think the new Notes feature has taken great strides to "be a better tool" for students of the Bible. The greatest advantage of the new Notes is that all my notes are in one place. This is an incredible improvement over the previous version. Second, concerning these comments below, please keep a couple things in mind: These comments are very
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I would love for this to be an option. Please allow users to set default Note Fonts.
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I would think that the Notes feature would allow you to define your own default fonts. Right now, it is a font I don't necessarily like, when I type a Bible reference, it creates a link in a different color (which I like), but in an even more unlikeable font. Additionally, my default font color is a dull gray, instead of black. I am not sure why the
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Timothy, I am experiencing the same pain with Anchors (they used to be called "attachment points"). Most of the time I had one anchor, because the majority of my notes are sermon notes, attached to a particular passage. This made it easy to keep in order (you could also sort by reference, which is now gone). In general, I like some of the aspects of