@Scratte Just noting that old browser support would be a nice thing to have - I always feel dirty when I need to transpile to older versions of JS and especially when I need to add polyfills or think about feature testing, but that's probably unavoidable :)
@Scratte I just mentioned it because adding a directive you mentioned (if I understand the meaning of the @run-at document-end correctly) is the same as wrapping the code into a load event listener, that shouldn't make a difference
@Scratte the problem is there is a difference between scraping as a practice and "falling back to requesting a page and parsing it" as scraping :) These policies are designed to catch scrapers, i.e. with Puppeteer, making hundreds or thousands of requests. If normal use rates were not allowed, then normal usage of the website would lead to permabans on IPs :)
^ because we are talking about 1-10 requests per page load depending on the task + some optimization techniques might very well reduce the number. Plus you of course send all your cookies and credentials with the request
@Scratte I dunno, maybe there is special handling required to make AJAX requests via tampermonkey userscripts? I can check later
dark modes usually change every facet of the theme, including inputs and areas (most of the time, to a lighter shade of the primary color, in your screenshot, the textarea is still light)
@Spectric but in the meantime - yes, I think so. I like when I am given the choice to decide what I want the site to look like, there are sites with some outstanding capabilities for color scheme customization out there. That might not be feasible on the scale of SE network as a company, but for a custom stylesheet or userscript that might work very well, IMO
@Spectric yeah, it seems to sit in chat from times unknown - they have a transparent background version :)
next, tags: #E0EAF1 is designed for light mode, you would want to recolor the tags to match the theme (I'd say something like main site but less contrasting - they for some reason made them pitch-black)
^ these small adjustments are likely to solve what @Scratte noted: it is a bit too colorful for dark mode :) I think these three should already be enough to make the theme more appealing
the next one is my personal preference (seems like it is in line with the SE design choices this time) - the links colored bright orange introduces too many anchor points for an eye, contributing to the feel of the screen being "cluttered", if you change to a light-grey or something similar (but enough to easily distinguish links), I think the theme will only benefit
and probably a nitpick - reputation number shouldn't be black in dark mode, it is too low a contrast - better greyed out or same color as the display name. But that's really a minor one
that's probably all for now :)
@Spectric NP :)
In general, I'd also think about giving more space to messages themselves by increasing padding on the top an bottom, but that's a carryover of the older times + a lot of people like density more than spaciousness, so that's only a possibility to consider
@OlegValter No. There's no such special requirements. About users and review queue, there is this url that I found ealier https://stackoverflow.com/review/user-info/2/158285?_=1620113454760 2 is for the close vote queue. "1620113454760" seems to be some id that increases every time one's browser is calling it. It's called from the review overview when hovering users.
This one is from suggested edits https://stackoverflow.com/review/user-info/1/121309?_=1620113454763 so I suppose 1 is the suggested edits queue :)
The thing I noticed is that it's pretty small and it gives just enough info about a user. Which could replace your API call for the reputation. It had enough information to make a proper usercard :)
I just tried it without the "counter" https://stackoverflow.com/review/user-info/1/13210306 and it works just fine.
@OlegValter Awesome :) Much better than some imgur image I found on meta :)
@Spectric I just played around on the front page. I get the top link to a var(--red-700).. I think it was 700 :)
I think I have a user style for a room on chat.stackexchange somewhere. I didn't like the blue, so I made it look like a chat room at chat.stackoverflow :)
With regard to the number in https://stackoverflow.com/review/user-info/queue-numer/userid
1 : Suggested Edits
2 : Close Votes
3 : Low Quality Posts
4 : First Posts
5 : Late Answers
6 : Reopen Votes
10 : Triage
11 : Help & Improvement
Rant: I accidentally clicked on one of the headers in the network tab in the developer tool, and now I can't sort them by timeOfRequest! Which was the default before. Any new transactions came in the bottom. Now that's just gone and one can only sort by other stuff which is completely useless to me since I'm interested in the last request that was made. URGH!!!
I really really hate it when user interfaces make it so that if you click in the wrong area then there's no way back :(
Hmm.. so I just tried to see how to scrape the Question/Answer to take out the usercards for poster and editor and put that into the Suggested Edit. After about 15 minutes, I got pissed off that I have to do this to get the information only because Stack thinks it shouldn't be there now. I think.. my life is too short. So I closed it all, and I'm not likely to want to spent more time on putting in all this energy just to work for free.
If Stack wants users to review it's on them to give the information that users wants there. And space enough to see the actual review instead of having them look at white space and useless things.
What I mean to say is that reviewing doesn't make me happy anyway, and doing it would only be because it needs to be done. But it doesn't really. If no one reviewed that queue again until Stack fixes it, everyone would be better off.
Me fixing it on my end just gives Stack an excuse to do whatever they want, because the users will make it work for them.
@Spectric Didn't it have the image as a 4 in one? Where one is suppose to use it as a sprite (if that's what they're called.. I can never remember that word)?
Ohh.. nice :) I'll probably put them into the script directly, since I always use "incognito" and nothing ever gets written from one session to the next.
It's funny how dark mode changes the seemingly transparent background of an avatar to be very bright white :)
@Spectric I was thinking it is linked to the text input field. So the colour of own messages should be the same. I think it's how it works in normal mode.
I think some of your !important are interfering with my username colour scheme.
I have a different user script that gives room owners a special colour. Moderators too.
I've given some moderators their own unique colour :)
This is your script in SOCVR. This is my script when yours isn't running. rene is a Room Owner, and hence red. Makyen has their own invidividual colour :)
@Spectric maybe there is an overlap with other directives?
@Scratte after you do a dozen of integrations where you need to slap a logo of the product somewhere you start to look for the brand page for these things :)
@Scratte btw, what would a red link mean? "don't touch"? :)
@Scratte yeah, that one is quite useful, thank you :) Surely goes to the list of fallbacks
FYI, I have "5,94766 gold badges" for some reason :) Seems like the stats on the page doesn't do rounding
@Scratte frankly, I am just playing around to hone my skill :) Most of the time, I prefer vanilla experience to keep me irritated enough to demand changes from SE when I see an opportunity
@Scratte yes, down with the capitalist oppression - unpaid workforce of SE demand rights :)
@Spectric can you add a plain CSS file for it? I prefer local overrides with no scripts involved - then I could test :)
@Scratte as @Spectric mentioned already, this is a de-facto standard notation for minified versions of JS (just as .spec.js for test files) files and is considered best practice :)
@Scratte that's just a preference, but I think when it is expected to have many links in one place (i.e. SOCVR chat room), they should be dimmed (not necessarily shades of gray, but something similar). Otherwise, you add with too many visual anchor points
A userscript that adds Dark Mode to Stack Exchange Chats, while also allowing you to customize themes and colors!
Version 0.2: still beta
Screenshot / Code Snippet
About
Since the introduction of Dark Mode, we have not seen it being expanded to chats. This userscript adds a customizable Dark...
@Scratte it is just so bizarre that something like this wasn't checked... I reported it - I need to know if this was intentional, I can't believe it could be :)
Heh.. I'm sure they just test in production. Like when they decided to not mark any flags on deleted post as automatically helpful. Which resulted in NAA flags never being marked as helpful :D
I have two of those.. They didn't even fix the database after they fixed the bug. They'll be there forever.
@Scratte ah, and I don't want to blame anyone, but I think I know who is responsible for making the "filter" button take the huge space on the top... I won't say anything, but here is a small hint: "thank you"
@Scratte exactly, I meant several people :) Something about the style looked overly familiar (I am not talking about the quality of the change, but rather of the idea of it): lisahpark.com/stack-overflow/#review.