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This idea is an extension of #724(Min/Max values for Contrast)
Many people use Contrast adjustment as means to achieve "sub-zero-brightness". Meaning, when Brightness is 0, you can make your screen even dimmer by lowering Contrast.
For this usecase, it would be easier and more logical to combine both sliders — Brightness and Contrast — into one unified brightness adjustment.
You hover your mouse over TwinkeTray's ❇️ icon → scroll mouse wheel down to reduce Brightness → Brightness reaches 0% → you just continue scrolling down → screen keeps getting darker by reducing Contrast value (no extra clicks required!)
And vice-versa: scroll mouse wheel up → Contrast level will go up → until [maximum contrast value] is reached → then continue scrolling to increase actual Brightness level.
On the Unified Slider, the Contrast value could be displayed as "negative brightness".
For example, if your [maximum contrast level] is set to 50%, the Unified Slider could look like this: [−50...0...50...100]
I hope the graphic below illustrates this somewhat clearer:
Alternatively, if Windows does not allow negative slider values in the UI — or for aesthetic reasons — the same logic can be applied to simply adjusting existing Brightness/Contrast sliders individually in sequence.
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This idea is an extension of #724 (Min/Max values for Contrast)
Many people use Contrast adjustment as means to achieve "sub-zero-brightness". Meaning, when Brightness is 0, you can make your screen even dimmer by lowering Contrast.
For this usecase, it would be easier and more logical to combine both sliders — Brightness and Contrast — into one unified brightness adjustment.
On the Unified Slider, the Contrast value could be displayed as "negative brightness".
For example, if your [maximum contrast level] is set to 50%, the Unified Slider could look like this:
[−50...0...50...100]
I hope the graphic below illustrates this somewhat clearer:
Alternatively, if Windows does not allow negative slider values in the UI — or for aesthetic reasons — the same logic can be applied to simply adjusting existing Brightness/Contrast sliders individually in sequence.
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