well anyway as long as shows up in the Network profile (those with less precision), it seems pretty safe to assume it’ll stay there, at least — since no redesign of those Network profile pages has ever been done in a very long time
For some reason they appear to think "responsive (design)" === "narrower width", instead of "responsive design" === "how things are displayed on the page adapts to the user's screen/window size, aspect ratio (width and height), and pixel density, such that the content is displayed well regardless of what those properties are, within the designed-for variance."
@Makyen As an Android developer who's always had to implement for a wide variety of widths and never once did it by adding whitespace on the sides, I cannot +1 this enough.
Sometimes I wish I could mjölnir posts closed for non-dupe reasons. It seems some users are quick on the trigger of close votes but they don't realise we actually have dupe targets. Re-opening just to close as dupe is probably too much hassle, I just end up commenting with a link to the dupe.
@Makyen You would expect the Public platform team would have the same concern. I wonder if their "problems" are solved by some clever Dev tooling that makes these semantic class names not needed for them.
@rene Maybe. I suspect that what they are doing is everything is in the HTML generation. The concept of having styles separately in CSS is just tossed out for SE sites. All, or nearly all, of the styles are applied directly on the HTML as it's generated using CSS classes which are shortcuts for, in most cases, a single CSS property. Effectively, this is very similar to just using style strings to apply the properties.
The only real thing they are doing with CSS classes is using them as a compression methodology (and thus also obfuscation) rather than write out the whole property and value in the style. For example, the class d-flex is entirely display: flex !important; and mr24 is margin-right: 24px !important;.
It sort-of makes sense if your base concept for constructing pages is a bunch of functions which generate the HTML with exactly the same styling, with absolutely no variance or possibility of adapting the styling based on where that HTML is used.
What about this javaquestion? OP posted pictures of code, then added a self-answer with the code. Doesn't look like an MCVE. They later added an actual answer to their own question. Not sure it's worth preserving.
Can anyone see a reason why this question is protected? Posted today; viewed 30 times; +2/-1 votes and 2 close votes. What's "highly active" about it?
... ah, I think I see: auto-protected because of two deleted, low-quality answers by low rep. users. Anyway, protection didn't stop me from casting the third CV!
@rene One of the things which the lack of semantic CSS does is makes it very hard to to be responsive, because in order to be responsive you need to be able to use @media queries to apply different property values based on the size of the viewport. Without semantic CSS, you have to very carefully construct a selector, based on the properties applied within that HTML structure which will match the specific thing you're trying to target, and nothing else. That's definitely non-trivial.
@AdrianMole You've basically described the rule for auto-protection. "Highly active" basically means "it got multiple deleted answers from low-rep users."
Does not disclose affiliation, and the advertised web tool is free indeed but the page is full of ads, looks spammy to me: stackoverflow.com/a/68681285/2227743
Instead of a mobile site, you have one site which shows a different layout to different devices based on their screen size
since 2013 or so the best practice has been "mobile first" with "progressive enhancement"
meaning you design your site for smartphone browsers first, and that also forces you to put just the most important content on the page, with other stuff either not available or behind things like hamburger menus
as the viewport gets larger, you set breakpoints via @media queries to set different layout styles, and at bigger viewport sizes, you can add more stuff that's not critically important
menu items get dedicated screen space rather than being put in a dropdown menu, for example. Images get shown inline rather than as links or thumbnails, etc.
It does not entail making (probably unilateral) editorial decisions about certain content being "toxic", or wrecking the well-working existing layout for the largest viewports, like what happened here today
@TylerH I hate that. I look at my profile now and it just seems like it's incomplete. Like I'm looking at a "this is what we have so far" quick review.
@TylerH looks like historical lock would work better than plain closure in this case (at 10 years age and 85K views it technically qualifies I think). At first I was going to vote close because I agree with your assessment but closer look at comments and prior close-reopen history made me feel that it will be eventually reopened again if not locked
@Machavity I flagged one of the recent vandalising edits for mod attention, would appreciate if you have a look. The sooner this stops the better - stackoverflow.com/q/67042505
Anyone here who has "a lot of text" (read: more than the avatar box is high) in their profile, that would like to be an example in a screen shot at Stack Apps? :)
@TylerH It looks like we may have duplicated quite a bit of effort, as I'd been working on this yesterday and gotten a large portion of it done. I'm still working on small viewports (i.e. < 550px, or so). So far, I've only needed a slight bit of JS in order to tighten-up the inter-row gaps between the first and second row in each column. OTHO, I still need to look at what portions of my overall SE-responsiveness changes I'm actually making use of with the changes I made.
Mine could still use some work wrt. very wide viewports too, as I'm mostly just stretching the center/left column.
It looks like @Scratte's been working on it too, I assume from the request for a test subject. :; Given the issue, it's not surprising to see multiple people working on it.
@Makyen you always do things the right way the first time around so I'm sure yours is cleaner so far :-p
Here's a preview of my styles so far; not much, and some small overlap with other functionality too (fixing the background colors of the gold/silver/bronze badge icons for dark mode) i.stack.imgur.com/aWlZ7.png
I botched the screen shot since I didn't turn my own CSS off, but this is what @Vickel looks like on my end now. I scrape the activity page to get the first and last activity. And added current UTC time for easy comparison.
In case it's useful, here's a screenshot from the latest blog post about the old layout when it was announced: i.stack.imgur.com/FM1Pu.png for comparison
@TylerH Thanks. I'm not sure I'd call it cleaner. The lack of semantic CSS makes targeting specific things a royal pain in the rear. I've got strings of selectors a mile long, and still had to resort to JS to mark the page with a class as the user's profile page in order to not interfere with other pages.
@Scratte Please ignore my last few messages. After double-checking, I don't think there's anything that's mod-only in them, but I moved them to be on the safe side.
@AdrianMole Look aside, I think this is the biggest loss of functionality. I don't really care enough about the "last visited" but "member since" is quite important, IMO. Especially because it can be used for metric when considering abuse.
@Scratte I'm sorry that's the result. The comments I removed were about a very limited subset of functionality. If you just ignore everything you remember about what I said, or at least not continue discussing those specific things, then there is no issue.
@TylerH Meh, I'm used to my content falling on deaf ears (figuratively). I don't really expect people to respond any more.
There was one question that was posted and ended with "Ask for any details, if you need them". I immediately commented to ask for debugging details because I thought OP would be quick to respond, so I held off the CV.
Several hours later, there was no response and I CV'd. To my knowledge, the OP still hasn't added the relevant debugging details.
Although I suspect the post has been eaten by the Roomba already.
The ignore tag has the following wiki:
Many source control systems have an "ignore"-file mechanism that specifies files that should not be committed or tracked in version control.
So the tag is supposed to be used similarly to the gitignore tag, but for questions which aren't specific to git. B...