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The user can customize fonts, colors, positions of links in the margins, and many other things! This is done through custom Cascading Style Sheets stored in subpages of the user's "User" page.
Per skin: MediaWiki Manual:Gallery of user styles etc. Typically loaded style sheets: common/shared.css; common/commonPrint.css; Skin-specific main file. e.g., monobook/main.css (normal skin for PC's), chick/main.css (normal skin for handhelds) Browser-specific fixes (also skin-specific) Examples for Monobook: For Firefox: monobook/FF2Fixes.css
Used on links pointing to the same page (e.g. Wikipedia:Catalogue of CSS classes) ? ? skin-skinname Each skin has its own name as a class in the body element. These classes allow skin-specific print rules to be easily applied. Skin name is lowercase: skin-monobook, skin-modern etc. /includes/Skin.php: sortable Related to sortable tables ...
During development, the new CSS framework is initially written in personal CSS, then moved to a Development gadget, which anyone can enable to test the code. Templates will be converted in their respective sandboxes, calling upon the new CSS from the gadget. Once the CSS framework is finished, it can be moved to Common.css.
The introduction of the Arms Deal update to Counter-Strike: Global Offensive in August 2013 added cosmetic items termed "skins" into the PC versions of the game. The developers had considered other types of customization drops for the game before coming to weapon skins; they had ruled out on player skins, since Global Offensive is a first-person shooter and the player would not see their ...