Forum Discussion
josh_bodner
Microsoft
Aug 24, 2021Dev channel update to 94.0.992.1 is live
Hello Insiders! Today we’re releasing build 94.0.992.1 to the Dev channel, and believe it or not, this is the last build for version 94, give or take a patch or two. So if you’re going to need to g...
josh_bodner
Microsoft
Sep 02, 2021Paul_VC As with most things related to how webpages are rendered, this appears to be behavior we inherit from Chromium (thus why that flag doesn't have Edge in it's name), and it doesn't appear that there's a way to do this in Chrome either, at least as far as I can tell, so this is likely something we'll have to work on ourselves if people request it. It shouldn't be too hard though since it just needs a switch!
Paul_VC
Sep 03, 2021Steel Contributor
Josh, I tested this on the Google Chrome browser on Android, and setting the edge://flags/#enable-force-dark flag to Disabled (as per your earlier suggestion) does indeed do what it is supposed to do: it keeps the original content colors, even when the browser UI or Android system UI is set to Dark Mode.
Setting the edge://flags/#enable-force-dark flag to Disabled still converts website content to Dark Mode, whereas it should not, so this is a bug in Edge.
- josh_bodnerSep 10, 2021
Microsoft
Ah, that's a different story then. Let me ask the team if this is something we're tracking since that's not a flag we own.- Paul_VCSep 10, 2021Steel Contributor
Note that setting the edge://flags/#enable-force-dark flag to Disabled works perfectly as it should do on the Windows-version of Edge. On the Android-version it does not, as reported above.
(I have not tested this on iOS nor Linux, perhaps someone can test that?)