Recensioni per Dynamic Zoom
Dynamic Zoom di ingolemo
Recensione di OoI
Valutata 3 su 5
di OoI, 7 anni fa- Just try to open a no 100% window popup and look at the loop it creates...
- When you switch your browser to a different resolution (like way smaller) screen, it doesn't fit anymore. You should be able to set a configration per screen or an auto resolution after detecting the screen resolution.
Edit :
To be more precise, I have two screen :
- 2560 X 1440
-1280x1024
I chose 1920 setting on the plugin. It makes the zoom 133% on the first screen , perfect BUT 67% one the second one, way too small and almost unreadable. So i suggested ideas to avoid that kind of problems because even if I like the plugin, I can't use it.
- When you switch your browser to a different resolution (like way smaller) screen, it doesn't fit anymore. You should be able to set a configration per screen or an auto resolution after detecting the screen resolution.
Edit :
To be more precise, I have two screen :
- 2560 X 1440
-1280x1024
I chose 1920 setting on the plugin. It makes the zoom 133% on the first screen , perfect BUT 67% one the second one, way too small and almost unreadable. So i suggested ideas to avoid that kind of problems because even if I like the plugin, I can't use it.
Replica dello sviluppatore
pubblicato il 7 anni faThe first issue is a browser limitation. As far as I can tell, Firefox zoom settings are all per-origin, rather than per-tab. There's not any way to have two different windows with different zoom levels looking at the same website. I can get rid of the zoom loop by not updating the zoom in that situation (which I think I will do), but that means one of the windows will always be zoomed incorrectly and it isn't always clear which one it should be.
The width selector isn't supposed to be the resolution of your screen; it's the width you want your browser window to appear to be to the website. Don't pick 1920 as the width setting, use the default 1280 or one of the options in between. This will make websites be zoomed in on your larger monitor, but they will be perfectly readable. Most websites just have too much white space when you try to view them with 1920, anyway.
The width selector isn't supposed to be the resolution of your screen; it's the width you want your browser window to appear to be to the website. Don't pick 1920 as the width setting, use the default 1280 or one of the options in between. This will make websites be zoomed in on your larger monitor, but they will be perfectly readable. Most websites just have too much white space when you try to view them with 1920, anyway.