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#2
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... wrote: On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 17:41:08 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 15:17:58 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "D.Duck" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... I like Firefox. Actually, I really don't see a huge difference using it as compared to IE. The only annoying issue with it is setting the text size. You can increase or decrease it easily from the default, but you have to do it every time the program starts. It would be nice if it could be set and stay set even after closing and then restarting Firefox. Eisboch Are you aware of CRTL and minus key, CRTL and plus key. They easily change the text size up or down. Yes, and that's what I do. It sounds stupid and lazy, but I wish there was a way to keep it from defaulting back to the "normal" size every time you open Firefox. No big deal, but it's the only complaint I have with the program. Eisboch In the address window of the browser type: about:config and hit your enter key. You'l be presented with a few zillion preference settings for the browser including default font size. I don't know which one it is off the top of my head, but most of them can be figured out. Any settings you change will become BOLD, so they are easy to find again if you decide you chose the wrong setting and want to change it. WOW! Thanks. I need to go back and study it for a while but I suspect the solution to my complaint is there. Eisboch If that doesn't work out, you can always just buy a bigger monitor! LOL OR you can go into the OS appearance/settings and make a subtle change or two that will resolve the problem on a permanent basis. If Vista is the same as earlier MS OSs, 98, etc, that will not affect the text size in browser windows. The solution form Salty is what he was looking for. Yeah, it does. Also you can change the size of displayed type generally in the appearance submenus by change a percentage number. I've done it for years. Do I understand you to say that if, for example, you have a Word doc open with text entered in the doc and you change the desktop Properties Appearance Font size from Normal to Extra Large, the text in the doc will increase in size? Not the doc font size but the physical size as it appears on your monitor. If yours does that, you must have a special version of XP that I've never seen before. Never tried it in WORD, but when I use my XP laptop and either firefox or t'bird, my settings changes make the type size in those apps larger. Next time I fire up the laptop, I'll check word. I think the places you'll find the text size change will be the desktop itself Task Bar, Start menu, Title Bar and Tool Bars of open applications. Places like that. It will not affect the text size within the browser window if we're discussing browsers, Word document text size, Excel spreadsheet text size, to name a few. Nope. On XP you can go into desktop appearance and change the font and size of all sorts of things. While the labels in there might read "X" I found through experimentation they also applied to "Y" in some important cases. But "Y" doesn't apply to browser window html text or any of my other examples. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. :) |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... wrote: On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 17:41:08 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 15:17:58 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "D.Duck" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... I like Firefox. Actually, I really don't see a huge difference using it as compared to IE. The only annoying issue with it is setting the text size. You can increase or decrease it easily from the default, but you have to do it every time the program starts. It would be nice if it could be set and stay set even after closing and then restarting Firefox. Eisboch Are you aware of CRTL and minus key, CRTL and plus key. They easily change the text size up or down. Yes, and that's what I do. It sounds stupid and lazy, but I wish there was a way to keep it from defaulting back to the "normal" size every time you open Firefox. No big deal, but it's the only complaint I have with the program. Eisboch In the address window of the browser type: about:config and hit your enter key. You'l be presented with a few zillion preference settings for the browser including default font size. I don't know which one it is off the top of my head, but most of them can be figured out. Any settings you change will become BOLD, so they are easy to find again if you decide you chose the wrong setting and want to change it. WOW! Thanks. I need to go back and study it for a while but I suspect the solution to my complaint is there. Eisboch If that doesn't work out, you can always just buy a bigger monitor! LOL OR you can go into the OS appearance/settings and make a subtle change or two that will resolve the problem on a permanent basis. If Vista is the same as earlier MS OSs, 98, etc, that will not affect the text size in browser windows. The solution form Salty is what he was looking for. Yeah, it does. Also you can change the size of displayed type generally in the appearance submenus by change a percentage number. I've done it for years. Do I understand you to say that if, for example, you have a Word doc open with text entered in the doc and you change the desktop Properties Appearance Font size from Normal to Extra Large, the text in the doc will increase in size? Not the doc font size but the physical size as it appears on your monitor. If yours does that, you must have a special version of XP that I've never seen before. Never tried it in WORD, but when I use my XP laptop and either firefox or t'bird, my settings changes make the type size in those apps larger. Next time I fire up the laptop, I'll check word. I think the places you'll find the text size change will be the desktop itself Task Bar, Start menu, Title Bar and Tool Bars of open applications. Places like that. It will not affect the text size within the browser window if we're discussing browsers, Word document text size, Excel spreadsheet text size, to name a few. Nope. On XP you can go into desktop appearance and change the font and size of all sorts of things. While the labels in there might read "X" I found through experimentation they also applied to "Y" in some important cases. But "Y" doesn't apply to browser window html text or any of my other examples. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. :) It is possible that Harry knows something we don't. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "D.Duck" wrote in message ... "HK" wrote in message . .. If yours does that, you must have a special version of XP that I've never seen before. Never tried it in WORD, but when I use my XP laptop and either firefox or t'bird, my settings changes make the type size in those apps larger. Next time I fire up the laptop, I'll check word. I think the places you'll find the text size change will be the desktop itself Task Bar, Start menu, Title Bar and Tool Bars of open applications. Places like that. It will not affect the text size within the browser window if we're discussing browsers, Word document text size, Excel spreadsheet text size, to name a few. Nope. On XP you can go into desktop appearance and change the font and size of all sorts of things. While the labels in there might read "X" I found through experimentation they also applied to "Y" in some important cases. But "Y" doesn't apply to browser window html text or any of my other examples. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. :) I am not sure we are talking about the same thing. If you have Firefox and click on "View", then "Text Size", then "Increase" (or just use Ctrl +) it expands the whole Firefox display window. On this HP Laptop, I have to increase it twice in order to fill the wide screen. I've messed around with the Firefox settings under Tools -Options-Content, default font, size, advanced tab, Font sizes, Font types, unchecked the "Allow pages to chose their own font, etc. None of the changes to these settings has the same effect as the simple "Ctrl +". It would probably help if I knew what I was talking about. I do know that changing the settings in XP screws up the appearance of other programs. Not a big deal. Eisboch |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. D.Duck wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... wrote: On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 17:41:08 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 6 Dec 2007 15:17:58 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "D.Duck" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... I like Firefox. Actually, I really don't see a huge difference using it as compared to IE. The only annoying issue with it is setting the text size. You can increase or decrease it easily from the default, but you have to do it every time the program starts. It would be nice if it could be set and stay set even after closing and then restarting Firefox. Eisboch Are you aware of CRTL and minus key, CRTL and plus key. They easily change the text size up or down. Yes, and that's what I do. It sounds stupid and lazy, but I wish there was a way to keep it from defaulting back to the "normal" size every time you open Firefox. No big deal, but it's the only complaint I have with the program. Eisboch In the address window of the browser type: about:config and hit your enter key. You'l be presented with a few zillion preference settings for the browser including default font size. I don't know which one it is off the top of my head, but most of them can be figured out. Any settings you change will become BOLD, so they are easy to find again if you decide you chose the wrong setting and want to change it. WOW! Thanks. I need to go back and study it for a while but I suspect the solution to my complaint is there. Eisboch If that doesn't work out, you can always just buy a bigger monitor! LOL OR you can go into the OS appearance/settings and make a subtle change or two that will resolve the problem on a permanent basis. If Vista is the same as earlier MS OSs, 98, etc, that will not affect the text size in browser windows. The solution form Salty is what he was looking for. Yeah, it does. Also you can change the size of displayed type generally in the appearance submenus by change a percentage number. I've done it for years. Do I understand you to say that if, for example, you have a Word doc open with text entered in the doc and you change the desktop Properties Appearance Font size from Normal to Extra Large, the text in the doc will increase in size? Not the doc font size but the physical size as it appears on your monitor. If yours does that, you must have a special version of XP that I've never seen before. Never tried it in WORD, but when I use my XP laptop and either firefox or t'bird, my settings changes make the type size in those apps larger. Next time I fire up the laptop, I'll check word. I think the places you'll find the text size change will be the desktop itself Task Bar, Start menu, Title Bar and Tool Bars of open applications. Places like that. It will not affect the text size within the browser window if we're discussing browsers, Word document text size, Excel spreadsheet text size, to name a few. Nope. On XP you can go into desktop appearance and change the font and size of all sorts of things. While the labels in there might read "X" I found through experimentation they also applied to "Y" in some important cases. I understand that you are a computer guru, but on WinXP it changes the font size of the window, icons and menu's, but does not change the font size of the web page. |
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