Muto <sh...@muto.ca> writes: This sounds like some pretty cool additions to the site's css! I've got some familiarity with html and CSS. I'll try to find some time to take a look at what you've done.
> Hello, bug-hurd readers, > > The "Patches" section of the Hurd's Savannah project page, along with > the hurd-web maling list have not been all that active lately, so just > to make sure someone sees this, I want to start a discussion here in > the main mailing-list regarding the current state of local.css. I'm > sorry, I don't mean to be a nuisance. > > A few days ago, I sent a patch to the Hurd, which contains a > CSS file that enhances the website's mobile view on all browsers that > support @media (most browsers). I believe that this stylesheet improves > the site considerably, not just for mobile viewers, but for everyone. > > Aside from just adding mobile support, I also added what I > consider to be globally increased readibility, such as a > background-color change on <pre> blocks, and a bold font weight on > <code> tags. There are many such small changes like this that I would > like feedback on. > > The file, along with screenshots, are attachments at: > https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?9764 > > In the file there are detailed comments describing every new addition > to the code. Please reply to this with any thoughts, ideas, concerns, > criticism (constructive or not), worries, or questions (and if this > stylesheet is complete garbage, I'll totally own it, so please let me > know.) > > Again, I really think this is something the Hurd's Ikiwiki site could > use, and I really think it'll help viewers find what they're looking > for faster and with more comfort. > > Lastly, I know on the website it says specifically "do not hold back > until the file is perfect. Make small code commits frequently", but I'm > not sure how I'd go about that as someone without commit access (and I > didn't want to spam up the "patches" section at Savannah with a > hundred tiny changes). I'm sorry, again. > -- Joshua Branson Sent from Emacs and Gnus