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#1
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Odd Opera displaying
Opera displays a local file page at 85% of screen width but
the same page online displays at 60% of screen width. Other browsers show the 85% width online or local. In any case, width liquidity for mobile is ok. Why would online differ from local file (only on Opera). Yes, I've rattled Opera Help and forums and checked my uploads of html and css. [Please don't go ranting about my web page -- it's working fine for me.] Mason Clark frontal-lobe.info (stay away) p.s. "abandon Opera" is a permissible response. |
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#2
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Odd Opera displaying
masonc wrote:
Opera displays a local file page at 85% of screen width but the same page online displays at 60% of screen width. Other browsers show the 85% width online or local. In any case, width liquidity for mobile is ok. Why would online differ from local file (only on Opera). Yes, I've rattled Opera Help and forums and checked my uploads of html and css. [Please don't go ranting about my web page -- it's working fine for me.] Mason Clark frontal-lobe.info (stay away) p.s. "abandon Opera" is a permissible response. Opera has: 1) Two entirely different development streams. Some help pages you may find, are for the old version. The development streams exist to make designing the browser easier, not to "preserve feature set". 2) A browser-wide scale setting. This is something a user might adjust, if they just bought a 4K screen. 3) Site-specific preference recording (perhaps you used control-scroll to set the scale or something, on a previous visit). I doubt modifying something in CSS Style is going to override every option the browser has got. A local file would be a "different site" than a file fetched from your web server. Some browsers use a multiplicity of database files, and the entries are tied together in all the files. Trying to edit just one database file (like delete a web site from it) will leave "leftovers" in the other files. One editor I tried to use, didn't really understand the schema, so it could not really intelligently alter things. But what it did allow me to do, is change a boolean in one of the rows. So if you don't delete entries, but just change a parameter for a site, that's a little bit safer. Adjusting a site can be safer than deleting it. It's a web browser - be careful what you wish for... Paul |
#3
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Odd Opera displaying
"masonc" wrote
| Opera displays a local file page at 85% of screen width but | the same page online displays at 60% of screen width. | A page doesn't display relative to screen width. It displays in pixels or as a percentage of the browser window width. You didn't link to the webpage so it's hard to say what's happening. My guess would be a difference in CSS. Do you have the same CSS locally? Opera is also famous for design idealism rather than realism. Their browser never took off because it was too unforgiving in the way it rendered pages. But I haven't tried it for some time and it's been changed, so I don't know if that's still an issue. |
#4
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Odd Opera displaying
On Sun, 5 Aug 2018 09:43:39 -0400, Mayayana wrote:
"masonc" wrote | Opera displays a local file page at 85% of screen width but | the same page online displays at 60% of screen width. | A page doesn't display relative to screen width. It displays in pixels or as a percentage of the browser window width. You didn't link to the webpage so it's hard to say what's happening. My guess would be a difference in CSS. Do you have the same CSS locally? Opera is also famous for design idealism rather than realism. Their browser never took off because it was too unforgiving in the way it rendered pages. But I haven't tried it for some time and it's been changed, so I don't know if that's still an issue. Much to my disappointment, it is now Chrome. v12.16 (or.17) was the last of the ProperOpera. When Jon was about to start Vivaldi I hoped that it would be Opera, but no, it's bloody Chrome again! I uase Fx for a while, then Cyberfox and then discovered Pale Moon, so I'm happy now. -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#5
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Odd Opera displaying
On Sun, 05 Aug 2018 08:56:32 -0400, Paul wrote:
3) Site-specific preference recording (perhaps you used control-scroll to set the scale or something, on a previous visit). Firefox has that too. I was surprised initially, but now I like it. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://BrownMath.com/ http://OakRoadSystems.com/ Shikata ga nai... |
#6
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Odd Opera displaying
I hate it when I must admit stupidity.
My Opera's *ZOOM* was set at 75%. And Opera has it's own ideas about how to set and use Zoom. Best to set 100% on both a local and online pages. Thanks for your attention, sorry to waste our time. Mason Clark http://frontal-lobe.info On Sun, 05 Aug 2018 01:09:49 -0700, masonc wrote: Opera displays a local file page at 85% of screen width but the same page online displays at 60% of screen width. Other browsers show the 85% width online or local. In any case, width liquidity for mobile is ok. Why would online differ from local file (only on Opera). Yes, I've rattled Opera Help and forums and checked my uploads of html and css. [Please don't go ranting about my web page -- it's working fine for me.] Mason Clark frontal-lobe.info (stay away) p.s. "abandon Opera" is a permissible response. |
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