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LinkBack | Outils de la discussion |
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#51 |
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Hébergeur: |
On 4/19/2008 9:45 PM, Patricia Aldoraz wrote:
> On Apr 20, 10:34 am, "David E. Ross" <nob...@nowhere.not> wrote: > >> In general, use of a, A, A+ on a Web page gives really bad results for a >> browser window that is less than full screen and with 800x600 resolution. >> > > Why is it any worse - in general - than a user changing the size of > his text himself? If the method is via PHP to deliver, eg, a bigger > font-size from a stylesheet alternative. In other words, you press A+ > and this causes the server to change the applicable css instruction. I often see the on-page size controls on Web pages of newspapers. When I try those controls, I find that their CSS is not quite right and that changing the font sizes makes the CSS errors far more visible. (Yes, the controls might work through JavaScript; but their effect seems to change the CSS.) Text in one column often overlaps text in another column. Images expand unnecessarily. Often, the result is the need to horizontally (right-left) scroll the page to read. Turning off CSS (easily done in SeaMonkey) to compensate for these errors often disables the on-page controls. I have none of these problems when I use my browser's own size controls. -- David Ross <http://www.rossde.com/> Have you been using Netscape and now feel abandoned by AOL? Then use SeaMonkey. Go to <http://www.seamonkey-project.org/>. |
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#52 |
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Hébergeur: |
Jukka K. Korpela wrote:
> > Almost all resize features I've seen give the choice of (at most) five > sizes, generally corresponding to the five sizes selectable via IE's > font size menu. I don't recall ever coming across such a site. The more common choices I've seen are as Mr Shagnasty observed, ranging from something near xx-small to about medium. > If we added a control that has more options, say 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, > 15, 16 points, then there would be some added value especially to IE > users, I don't see how. If an IE user needs something other than the 5 standard choices it provides, don't you think they would have figured out how to get the default size they really want, and in a way that would work on more than 1 site? Your other statements supporting this font sizing idea are a real stretch, I think. -- Berg |
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#53 |
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Hébergeur: |
Ed Mullen wrote:
> Blinky the Shark wrote: >> Bergamot wrote: >> >>> What's your idea of "bigger" type? >> >> >> XXXXXXX X X X XXXXXXX >> X X X X X >> X X X X X >> X XXXXXXX X XXXXXXX >> X X X X X >> X X X X X >> X X X X XXXXXXX >> >> >> > Or maybe this? > > http://edmullen.net/temp/Clibpoard02.jpg Dingdingdingding! Winner! -- Blinky Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://improve-usenet.org Blinky: http://blinkynet.net |
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#54 |
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Hébergeur: |
On Thu, 17 Apr 2008, Michael Stemper wrote:
>> but it seems they have first set the BODY size to something small >> and then the P size to something larger. > > I was wondering what it was. You find it in http://en.wikipedia.org/skins-1.5/monobook/main.css body { font: x-small sans-serif; ... #globalWrapper { font-size: 127%; ... So just put #globalWrapper { font-size: 100% !important } into your userContent.css :-) -- In memoriam Alan J. Flavell http://groups.google.com/groups/sear...Alan.J.Flavell |
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#55 |
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Hébergeur: |
Scripsit Bergamot:
> Jukka K. Korpela wrote: >> >> Almost all resize features I've seen give the choice of (at most) >> five sizes, generally corresponding to the five sizes selectable via >> IE's font size menu. > > I don't recall ever coming across such a site. The more common choices > I've seen are as Mr Shagnasty observed, ranging from something near > xx-small to about medium. OK, I formulated my thought poorly. I meant that there are typically just five choices, or some fairly small number of choices, which is as coarse as the IE menu - and often even _less_ useful, since the sizes are smaller. >> If we added a control that has more options, say 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, >> 14, 15, 16 points, then there would be some added value especially >> to IE users, > > I don't see how. If you prefer 11 points, for example, this is how you would get it. IE's menu does not let you choose that "intermediate" size. > If an IE user needs something other than the 5 > standard choices it provides, don't you think they would have figured > out how to get the default size they really want, and in a way that > would work on more than 1 site? No, I don't. Think about a support site for people suffering from rare diseases. Many of those people might not use the web much if at all, _except_ for information relevant to the disease. Not being regular netizens, they might use a computer in a library today, their friend's computer tomorrow. > Your other statements supporting this font sizing idea are a real > stretch, I think. It wasn't really my idea. I was actually argumenting against it, when the above scenario was suggested. -- Jukka K. Korpela ("Yucca") http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
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