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This script and CSS makes the sidebar stay in the same position on the screen as you scroll. This may have undesirable side effects in Chrome; e.g., when viewing a page like the very common.css page you just edited to put this code in, the viewable content will become much shorter, and require vertical scrolling in a frame.
To some extent, this problem was slowed by the introduction of new standards by the W3C, such as CSS, introduced in 1998, which helped to provide greater flexibility in the presentation and layout of web pages without the need for large numbers of additional HTML elements and attributes.
The header text of the webpage is firstly rendered before the Bootstrap CSS files. The issue was documented in an article named "Flash of Unstyled Content". [ 4 ] At first, FOUC appeared to be a browser problem unique to Internet Explorer but later became apparent in other browsers, [ 5 ] [ 6 ] and has since been described as "a Safari epidemic".
When there is a long strip of right-positioned images or infoboxes together with a number of article sections, it usually causes the section editing links—"[edit]"—for the sections which start after the first and before the last image or infobox to bunch up to the left of it like this: [edit] [edit] [edit] (see Example 1.)
This may include rearranging the position of text and images to reduce overlap. Try other editing methods: Collaborate with other editors to try to find other editing methods to solve this problem. Maybe try other ways to fix the image overlapping text issue without affecting the desktop version of the site.
The CSS property text-rendering: optimizeLegibility; enables kerning in Firefox, Chrome, Safari, [12] Opera, and the Android Browser. [13] Another CSS property, font-feature-settings, also enables kerning in Internet Explorer 10+, Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and the Android Browser.
If the first text-word is too long, no text will fit to complete the left-hand side, so beware creating a "ragged left margin" when not enough space remains for text to fit alongside floating-tables. If multiple single image-tables are stacked, they will float to align across the page, depending on page-width.
Superscript text creates a few pixels of extra line space. There is a fix, though with the fix the superscript/subscript text looks <small> and slightly raised or lowered instead of superscripted or subscripted, making it hard to determine what is superscripted or subscripted in some instances. Quotes not displaying on Wikipedia pages properly?