Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Screen Font is too big
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I am having the same issue. Could you define “specific selectors”?
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@strawberry-3.141 said in Screen Font is too big:
font-size: 1em
I did this and the font size did not change. I went down to .25em, I also tried to go to 50%. What would I be doing wrong?
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@Menn80 What did you want to change specifically?
Just let us know and I can provide you with instructions. -
@yo-less I added
font-size: 1em to the custom.css file. When that didn’t work after some research I tried changing that down further. I than tried using %. When that didn’t work I removed that from the custom.css file and changed in the main.css file. I’m doing a test run on a 32inch tv and I’ve rotated it. It takes up the entire top 1/3 of the screen between the clock 30 day calendar and default weather.
I like the ratio of everything so I would prefer to change it all at once.
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I’m assuming you changed the font-size attribute somewhere else than in the body section of the main css file. Using the body section, you’re hypothetically telling it to change it everywhere, but most of the time you’re changing nothing at all, that is because most modules don’t use the general font size as far as I can tell (someone correct me if I’m wrong here).
The modules I’m using specifically tell the mirror to print their information in “small”, “medium”, “large”, … letters. This is what those section in the css file are for.
So, let’s say you don’t like that the “small” letters have a font size of 20px and you want them to be half as big, then you add the following lines to your custom.css:
.small { font-size: 10px; }
I suggest you try to find out in which section you changed the font-size in the main.css file. Add that section to the custom.css file and change your font size there. Otherwise all your font changes will be lost the next time you update your mirror.
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@yo-less
Alright, so if the default says 70% and I have told it to go to 100% in the body of the custom.css file I did exactly what I did not want, I went bigger. That I can understand. Should I change the custom.css file from saying
body {
.small {
font-size: 10px;
}
}to
{
.small {
font-size: 10px;
}
}also if my modules are using % should I use % instead of px or any other of the .css variants? My thought on the theory is it shouldn’t matter but sometimes my theory is so very wrong.
Thank you for explaining things to me, I am very new to this coding concept. I should have paid more attention to how this all works when I was younger!
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@Menn80 thats wrong Syntax in Plain CSS You can’t Nest like this. You have to do:
.modulename .small { font-size: 10px; }
and don’t put it between the Curly braces of body, that is just an example and Not necessary -
@strawberry-3.141
So I can pretty much remove the body writing that is in the .css file from the start? -
@Menn80 exactly
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@strawberry-3.141
Cool, I tried that only withbody .small {font-size: 10px;}
and that worked. Is this just a lazy solution? It seems like the only think that might pop up is if I do like the size of one module but I do of another. Can I than include line spacing in on that too? if so would I just add it like so?
body .small {font-size: 10px; line-height 15px;}