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{{CSS image crop | Image = The Name of the image file, or may accept {{Annotated image}}. | bSize = The Base Image width in pixels (the image we are cropping on) | cWidth = Crop Image Width in pixels | cHeight = Crop image Height in pixels | oTop = Offset Top in pixels, optional and defaults to 0 when omitted | oLeft = Offset Left in pixels, optional and defaults to 0 when omitted | Location ...
(2) The full width of the original [n]th image if total_width is given in order to resize all images to the same height and a given total width. height[n] (as above) The full height of the original [n]th image if total_width is given in order to resize all images to the same height and a given total width. Ignored otherwise.
xHeightpx (E.g., x150px) Scale the image to make it the specified number of pixels in height, and scale the width to retain the original aspect ratio. WidthxHeightpx (E.g. 100x150px) Scale the image to be no wider and no higher than the specified number of pixels.
An image size can be changed in several ways. Consider resizing a 160x160 pixel photo to the following 40x40 pixel thumbnail and then scaling the thumbnail to a 160x160 pixel image. Also consider doubling the size of the following image containing text.
CSS image replacement is a Web design technique that uses Cascading Style Sheets to replace text on a Web page with an image containing that text. It is intended to keep the page accessible to users of screen readers, text-only web browsers, or other browsers where support for images or style sheets is either disabled or nonexistent, while allowing the image to differ between styles.
The default width and height are currently 120px. Images displayed by the <Gallery>...</Gallery> tag do not obey user viewing preferences. The packed mode will automatically adjust image sizes to use available display space optimally. Every line specifies an image file. The File: prefix is unnecessary.
In the examples above, the size of the image is scaled based on each user's default image size, which can be changed at Special:Preferences. Setting image size in pixels, such as "250px", would override the user's preference and display the image as 250px wide for all users who view that image on that page.
The table cell would then resize itself automatically to just contain this image. It was also realized that the displayed size was controlled entirely by the attributes and was independent of the actual size of the image file used (although a real image file [note 1] was still needed). Accordingly, the same image file could be used for all the ...