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Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 12:43, 23 October 2011: 460 × 120 (4 KB): Iuri i10: Reverted to version as of 16:50, 19 February 2011: 16:50, 19 February 2011
The parameter upright=1 returns the same size as thumbnail width, and upright=0.75 is functionally identical to upright alone. If you set scaling factor equal to the image's aspect ratio (width divided by height) the result is equivalent to scaling the height to be equal to the normal thumbnail width.
Original file (SVG file, nominally 295 × 52 pixels, file size: 117 KB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Original file (SVG file, nominally 256 × 256 pixels, file size: 8 KB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Image using width upright=1.8, so that it is 80% wider than the Siberian Husky image above (which is at the default upright=1 width) Image using upright=0.5; a scaling factor less than 1 contracts the image width. An image's size is controlled by changing its width – after which software automatically adjusts height in proportion.
Although upright=1.1 and 240px do the job equally well for the common case where the default width is 220 pixels, many of the users who set the default width to 300 pixels to work better with their high-resolution screens will be annoyed with 200px because it will make the picture a third smaller than their preferred size.
If perrow is omitted, the width is fluid: one row comprises as many images as will fit across the available width of the user's display, wrapping automatically to as many additional lines as needed. Omitting perrow is now the recommended default. Prior to MediaWiki 1.17, the default was perrow=4. The default width and height are currently 120px.
The picture this screenshot is taken from is 1194 pixels wide and 1174 pixels tall. Image sizes on Wikipedia can be determined by doing the following: Go to the image page by clicking on the image thumbnail; Under the image there should be a set of numbers in the form "NNNNxMMMM." This is the size of the image in pixels.