![]() The colors, Duke! Courtesy of the MS Office color theme, ‘Slipspace’. On a black background the cursor renders pure white. On a white document, the cursor is stark black. But in almost every case inverse=contrast holds true. Okay fine, this isn’t literally true since gray value #7F7F7F (aka 127,127,127) is its own inverse. Using inverted color means your cursor’s contrast to its background is as high as possible. ![]() Most of the time if the pointer is hard to see it’s just lost in a field of snow-white websites and documents. You don’t have to find your pointer if you never lose it. My Favorite: Inverted Cursor Scheme (xor cursor) Judging by how many ways they’ve come up with to solve it, I guess Microsoft believes everyone has a hard time finding their mouse pointer on their big giant displays these days.
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