Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Messed up CSS between Portrait and Landscape monitors
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@Damian Use the built-in DOM inspector to see what styles are currently applied. Right-click on the compliments module and select “Inspect”.
Worst case, using
!important
should work:.module.compliments { font-size: 73% !important; }
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Nope, that never worked either😣
I cannot fathom out what is going on, even when I first loaded up the default MM it all looked too big. Thats why I then added in my config.js and CSS stuff from my Pi foders to see if they would help minimise things any.
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@Damian Inspect the element, and share a screenshot of the
div.module.compliments
element styles. At this point, either (1) your CSS is not being applied, or (2) those aren’t the right classes to use to target that element. I suspect the latter. -
Thanks, but do I download something onto the Pc to view? How do i inspect the element? There is nothing on that page to download, so how does the Dom inspector work?
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@Damian You don’t need to download anything. Use your mouse on the MagicMirror. Right-click the compliments module, and select “Inspect element”. Or, stop MM, then run
npm start dev
which will start in development mode with Chromium’s developer tools already open. You then just need to navigate the DOM to find the.compliments
element. Follow these instructions to take a screenshot on an RPi. -
😂… by pure fluke I just found the very setting I was looking for, and never even knew it was there, or even noticed it until now when instead of my usual > alt > File > Exit… or >Window > Minimise, my mouse flicked on View, and there right in front of me was Zoom In - Zoom Out!
Only trouble is if I restart/reload MM it reverts back, and I have to zoom out again x 6 so it looks good… anyone know how to set it so it stays at my set zoom?
Thanks to all who assisted here to try and solve this… I will now sneak off in embarrasment😶
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@Damian I was hoping you wouldn’t have to resort to it, but you can use CSS
transform: scale()
:body { transform: scale(0.8); /* for 80% */ }
Some CSS transforms are processor intensive, although without animation should be fine on an RPi.
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Thanks, but this is on a PC not a Pi … I have posted another post incase it gets lost in here, to find out if there is a setting to make to keep my MM Zommed out x 6, but I will try your suggestion here and see if that helps, as being a PC it should handle it eh?
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While MM is running, press these keys at the same time:
Default Display Size = Control and 0 (That’s a zero)
Zoom In = Control and Shift and = (That’s an equals sign)
Zoom Out = Control and - (That’s a dash/minus sign)
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@Damian Do you want 6x or 60%? (The former seems very small). Sorry I misunderstood about your PC; most of us use PCs as dev machines for the RPi.
If 6x (or, inverted, 1/6 or 16.7%):
body { transform: scale(0.167); /* this might get messy, at least with any raster assets (like images) */ }
Or 60%:
body { transform: scale(0.6); }
According to this very interesting StackExchange question, you can also set the
document
’szoom
property in JavaScript (and via CSS, too):document.body.style.zoom = 2;