In article <5789df88f8Lists@Torrens.org>, Richard Torrens (lists)
<Lists@Torrens.org> wrote:
> In article <5789dcef69tim@timil.com>, Tim Hill <tim@timil.com> wrote:
> > > It's also curious tha the text is truncated on the left margin as
> > > if CSS left-margin has a negative value.
> > You can try and decipher their CSS here:
> > https://www.electronics-notes.com/parts/css/style.complete.min.css?go=6
> > (The page in NetSurf is blank. Press f8 then use search and replace
> > to change the } into }+newline and change the wrapwidth to 1024.)
> Yes, I got that and had a quick look. Not an easy page to understand
> without a lot of processing.
Looking at it using Chrome Dev's "Inspect" the CSS is best described as a
rat's nest.
> > There's a width of 1270px in there which may be responsible but I
> > didn't cross-refer all the style and whatnot.
> It cannot be a negative left-margin as negative values aren't allowed.
> However - might Metsurf be calculating the margin and ending up with a
> negative result?
I didn't look in detail after I saw "width:1270px;".
If it contains such fixed widths and if centred in a narrower window it
would extend too far left and right offscreen. Widening the NetSurf
window brings it into view. If the window is already as wide as your
monitor, reducing the page to 80% zoom would probably bring it on screen.
--
Tim Hill
--------
Find an event to attend at:
http://timil.com/riscos/calendar/
Mimemap and other stuff:
http://timil.com/riscos/
No comments:
Post a Comment