After that, the only other color would be Blue. You have two options for this. You can either specify your Blue criteria in an additional IF statement which would make it so that anything that does not specifically fall within any of the criteria remains blank:

I am open to suggestions, but the only time I feel I would be at risk with that concern is if I am presenting a status update on the same day of one of the dates. So, if I had to update a blank cell for the day I could do so.


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We use status columns for alot of things, and a few times now I have run out of colors to choose from. I do not necessarily want to switch this to a dropdown column, as that can be a bit too unwieldy for my users. Just curious why the color palette stopped at 40 and not more?

Agreed and I want the ability to use the same color for multiple statuses. It should be up to us if that makes sense for our workflow. When you have a status that has multiple options, it can look like crap. I want to be able to bunch similar statuses together (Paid Social, Org Social)

Rather than having a preset number of colors to select from when coloring statuses, group names, etc. Monday should either replace the pregenerated ones with an RGB/Hex code input format allowing us to pick our own colors, or integrate that alongside the color presets.

This really needs to be an option. What we use the status column for is linked to a different platform. Changing the column type to a dropdown is a huge undertaking. We have been using Monday since 2019 and it is disappointing that something as simple as adding more colors has not been implemented.

For the Astro UXDS Light Theme, and on light backgrounds, the following Status Color values should be used. When used, a darker border is necessary around the fill color, as the fill colors do not pass WCAG AA contrast ratios on light backgrounds. Those border colors have been specified here.

We also need this. Since Statuses are by far the most useful column type for Automation, we are using multiple status columns on boards to accomplish what we need. The colors become meaningless when they are everywhere. In addition to using the same color multiple times, it would be useful to have the option of a colorless status column.

Part of why i wanted it was so I can both parse it and pass it along in my own script output. This is... okay, but it would probably be saner to use porcelain or some such and re-build the colored parts myself!

I like to see color because my scripting is robust enough (so far) to handle the color codes. It does seem like I'm going against the grain here, but I honestly don't see what the big deal is about having to parse stuff like escape codes in scripts. If colors help for interactive use, why wouldn't they help in script use where I might be aggregating data and crunching even more data than I would manually? Wouldn't colors be even more important?

Anyway, I have a neat little shell script I wrote that munges git status output, and i'm just looking to make this script keep the colors intact. My global git config is set so that the lists of changed and untracked files show up in color in the git status. Unfortunately unlike git diff there is no option for forcing color for git status that I can find.

produces no colored git status output, and you can even see here that I'm explicitly converting the leading hash-characters to blue because it helps highlight the different regions of output from my script.

Does anyone know how to get it to put out the colors? Is there maybe a standard program I can use that can be used as a "fake terminal" STDIN/STDOUT pipe? I am in fact also working on a pty pseudoterminal tool so I could certainly make use of that for this purpose, but it's a rather heavy-handed solution (and not ready for use yet as I haven't finished building it).

In addition to adding the global git color ui setting, I fixed this by making my alias look like below, its the secondary command that requires being told to use colors, as git will by default as of whatever 1.8.x version people have mentioned.

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I was going to post a question on how to change the default color when completing a markup in a Studio Session. However, in the process I figured it out. So now, I am instead sharing how to do this.

I've switched from xfce to i3 a few weeks ago so I'm still new to it and trying to understand how to fully configure it.

I'm encountering a problem with i3bar : depending on my configuration I can have either the clock showing, but only the default i3bar colors, or my custom colors, but without the clock. My goal is to get both the clock and the custom colors at the same time.

But now, when I tried to customize the color scheme in my i3 config, it stops showing : I have the right colors, but not the clock anymore. As stated earlier, its either one depending on the configuration, but not both at the same time.

Since the clock is not showing, it seems like i3 is reading the "color part" of the config file, but ignoring the i3status file.

If I comment the "color {" lines, then I get to see the clock again, but obviously I don't get the custom colors.

I know someones posted the steps to add columns, but i'm not aware of a guide for adding the colors, and without knowing what you've already done it's going to be near impossible to tell what to change since it's no longer a standard setup.

The light/dark modes are display themes in iOS settings. I can see the status bar when my iOS theme is light, but I can not see the status bar when I have the iOS theme as dark mode. (see my pics above)

Again, you can explicitly set the value if you prefer. But the idea of having it be reactive to whether the user has dark mode enabled or not is so that you can reactively use the correct color without any further settings.

@Sonashish , Create a color measure and use that in conditional formatting using the "Field value" Option. Table and Matrix in conditional formatting. In other visual in data color , when you do not have Legend and multiple measures

Modifying this property in a browser resulted in the header taking on the supplied color, though I have not actually tested this in a theme file.

Screen Shot 2021-01-04 at 11.16.57AM737377 52.7 KB

Today, I developed a dark mode for the alarm status table, and indeed, the header was a bit tricky. The top right corner can be set directly, but to change the header itself, I ended up setting it's background to transparent, so the underlying color could come through. The top left corner underneath the multistate button is a buffered image, so I ended up having to create a graphic to paint over it.

Here is the result:

image1163457 79.9 KB

I am wondering is there a way to change the status bar color on my app on iOS? I know this comes from the system, not directly from the app settings, but it looks ugly and I want to find a solution to make it pure black as it is on the nav bar.

Hi Friends. In my dashboard i have a mqtt sensor (numeric) that i show in a tile card. I would like to change the color of the icon according to the state of sensor (for example 0-50 green, 50-100 Yellow, over 100 Red).

Is It possibile?

Thanks

The status bar color can be light or dark depending on the wallpaper color. Most of the time, the status bar is light when the wallpaper is dark and vice versa. At least this is the expected behavior as follows:

Unfortunately, I noticed an issue when I set a wallpaper that is light at the top (at the location of the status bar) and dark at the bottom. The status bar remains light which makes it difficult to distinguish the elements. See below:

They could and should do it better, because when it is in their interest, they used AI and ML to scan all kinds of pictures to identify a bunch of stuff. But correctly setting the status bar elements color would not sell more HW neither more iCloud services, so it has very low prio.

Enhanced health reporting represents instance and overall environment health by using four colors, similar to basic health reporting. Enhanced health reporting also provides seven health statuses, which are single-word descriptors that provide a better indication of the state of your environment.

Elastic Beanstalk displays the health information for the overall environment (color, status, and cause) in the environment management console. This information is also available in the EB CLI. Health status and cause messages for individual instances are updated every 10 seconds and are available from the EB CLI when you view health status with eb health.

Elastic Beanstalk uses changes in instance health to evaluate environment health, but does not immediately change environment health status. When an instance fails health checks at least three times in any one-minute period, Elastic Beanstalk may downgrade the health of the environment. Depending on the number of instances in the environment and the issue identified, one unhealthy instance can cause Elastic Beanstalk to display an informational message or to change the environment's health status from green (OK) to yellow (Warning) or red (Degraded or Severe). 2351a5e196

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