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Accessibility promotes appropriate use of different technologies (HTML, CSS, Javascript, images, audio, video) that facilitates the reuse of the content itself, when it comes to distribute through other media. In conclusion, improving accessibility is an occasion to improve the quality of Wikipedia on a broader meaning.
Use in conjunction with {{Collapse bottom}}. Will collapse text in between the two templates. Template parameters [Edit template data] Parameter Description Type Status Title 1 title heading header reason result Main title of collapsed box Default Extended content Example This is the title text Line optional Custom warning line 2 Will override the standard warning line, and make the 'warning ...
A one-step zoom (in Safari, View > Zoom In) will fix the problem with Vector, but makes many other sites too big, thereby spoiling their layout. As others have noted, Monobook does not exhibit this issue. The problem can surely be debugged using the built-in CSS debugger in Safari or Firefox... – Justinbb 17:18, 26 November 2010 (UTC)
Would it not be more useful to have 'Disable Media Viewer' right at the top of any page, next to the log-in box rather than having to click on a picture, get the view you don't want, then scroll to the bottom of that page to find the 'disable' button.
In Fast Mode, using the option to disable CSS may also provide usable results (tested on Blazer 4.5 - Treo 700p) Large pages do not display completely. Editing large sections of text may not be successful. Cologne Blue. Readable and quite usable; logging in from a Palm device to switch to Cologne Blue may be a problem.
Implementation via interface changes alone would be a terrible idea as it opens up the site to vandalism through mobile apps, people editing with CSS adjustments or with javascript disabled, and so on, while patrollers are unable to access the site or use any JS-powered anti-vandalism tools – SD0001 18:55, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
Dark mode is working fine in both versions on all skins. The code editor at common.css is complaining about an unknown rule @-moz-document regardless of whether or not the remainder of the css is present. From a quick Google search, it's because @-moz-document is a Gecko only CSS extension. Testing on Chrome shows it to have no effect ...
CSS-in-JS is a styling technique by which JavaScript is used to style components. When this JavaScript is parsed, CSS is generated (usually as a <style> element) and attached into the DOM. It enables the abstraction of CSS to the component level itself, using JavaScript to describe styles in a declarative and maintainable way.