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@Arantor SVG can certainly do stuff with fancy gradients, but I'd go with dividing the space in two (along the obvious diagonal line) and apply the right gradient to each. Then set the result as a background image with CSS.
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@dkf I think you’re still going to end up getting wrecked on the blending doing it that way if not careful.
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@Arantor said in Help Bites:
if not careful
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Now that you mention it, it indeed looks like an off-center conic gradient. Well spotted!
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I think you're still going to get bitten on that alpha blend on the edge of the colour change.
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@Arantor Why? The rendering engine has perfect information to sort it out. It literally knows exactly what it is supposed to do.
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@dkf not so much the rendering as the declaring of it. But to actually try to recreate it.
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@Watson said in Help Bites:
@topspin said in Help Bites:
Not really help, more idle curiosity.
My thought is
Kind of looks like it, but also doesn't. Or, at least, I don't see how to do it.
The conical gradient has a hard edge at the seem and soft at the opposite side. More importantly, as far as I understand it, it's the same color along a fixed angle.
For the reference picture, the seam fades from a hard edge to a soft edge. I don't see how to do such a transition with a conical gradient.
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To my eyes there seems to be some horizontal banding. So maybe there's a horizontal gradient atop the conical gradient?
This was the best I could do:
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@Zecc said in Help Bites:
Sie haben die maximal zulässige Anzahl an Blinkernutzungen überschritten
So maybe there's a horizontal gradient atop the conical gradient?
I don't think that's it as I think the seam transitions smoothly from soft to hard. But anyway, your attempt looks pretty damn close.
EDIT: wait, maybe yours does that too. Doesn't quite look like it to me, but I'm not sure.