ಟೆಂಪ್ಲೇಟು:Font-size-x/doc
This is a documentation subpage for ಟೆಂಪ್ಲೇಟು:Font-size-x. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original ಟೆಂಪ್ಲೇಟು page. |
Purpose
[ಸಂಪಾದಿಸಿ]This template simplifies resizing extended selections of text. In contrast to {{font-size}}, it makes sure the line-height is adjusted proportionally to the font size.
Example
[ಸಂಪಾದಿಸಿ]The effect of the template is per word, sentence or paragraph.
Standard text | {{font-size-x}} 85% | {{font-size}} 85% |
---|---|---|
One of the planets that were known in ancient times is so difficult to observe as Mercury, and none presents so many obstacles to the study of its orbit and physical constitution. As to its orbit, Mercury is the only planet the course of which seems even now to have partly cut loose from the laws of universal gravitation, and the theory of which, although well built up by the genius of Leverrier, is still in considerable disagreement with the observations. The little we know of its physical construction is derived from the observations made a hundred years ago by Schroeter at Lilienthal. A telescopic examination of this planet is really a difficult affair. | One of the planets that were known in ancient times is so difficult to observe as Mercury, and none presents so many obstacles to the study of its orbit and physical constitution. As to its orbit, Mercury is the only planet the course of which seems even now to have partly cut loose from the laws of universal gravitation, and the theory of which, although well built up by the genius of Leverrier, is still in considerable disagreement with the observations. The little we know of its physical construction is derived from the observations made a hundred years ago by Schroeter at Lilienthal. A telescopic examination of this planet is really a difficult affair. | One of the planets that were known in ancient times is so difficult to observe as Mercury, and none presents so many obstacles to the study of its orbit and physical constitution. As to its orbit, Mercury is the only planet the course of which seems even now to have partly cut loose from the laws of universal gravitation, and the theory of which, although well built up by the genius of Leverrier, is still in considerable disagreement with the observations. The little we know of its physical construction is derived from the observations made a hundred years ago by Schroeter at Lilienthal. A telescopic examination of this planet is really a difficult affair. |
Standard text | {{font-size-x}} 118% | {{font-size}} 118% |
One of the planets that were known in ancient times is so difficult to observe as Mercury, and none presents so many obstacles to the study of its orbit and physical constitution. As to its orbit, Mercury is the only planet the course of which seems even now to have partly cut loose from the laws of universal gravitation, and the theory of which, although well built up by the genius of Leverrier, is still in considerable disagreement with the observations. The little we know of its physical construction is derived from the observations made a hundred years ago by Schroeter at Lilienthal. A telescopic examination of this planet is really a difficult affair. | One of the planets that were known in ancient times is so difficult to observe as Mercury, and none presents so many obstacles to the study of its orbit and physical constitution. As to its orbit, Mercury is the only planet the course of which seems even now to have partly cut loose from the laws of universal gravitation, and the theory of which, although well built up by the genius of Leverrier, is still in considerable disagreement with the observations. The little we know of its physical construction is derived from the observations made a hundred years ago by Schroeter at Lilienthal. A telescopic examination of this planet is really a difficult affair. | One of the planets that were known in ancient times is so difficult to observe as Mercury, and none presents so many obstacles to the study of its orbit and physical constitution. As to its orbit, Mercury is the only planet the course of which seems even now to have partly cut loose from the laws of universal gravitation, and the theory of which, although well built up by the genius of Leverrier, is still in considerable disagreement with the observations. The little we know of its physical construction is derived from the observations made a hundred years ago by Schroeter at Lilienthal. A telescopic examination of this planet is really a difficult affair. |
Usage notes
[ಸಂಪಾದಿಸಿ]- Sizes expressed as a percentage or in 'em' will give the best results
- If the text being resized contains an equal sign it needs to be written as
{{=}}
- The template does not seem to work reliably across paragraphs, so for best results it should be applied paragraph by paragraph when multiple adjacent paragraphs need to be resized.
- This template should only be used for text blocks up to a paragraph. It is a <span>-styled template.
See also
[ಸಂಪಾದಿಸಿ]{{Font-size-x/s}} for paragraphs spanning pages. Terminate with {{Font-size-x/e}}
All Wikisource size templates are relative to the default size. There are two kinds of sizing template: inline and block templates. Inline templates are suitable for use within a paragraph, but can't handle paragraph breaks, and do not adjust line spacing. Block templates can handle paragraph breaks, and adjust line spacing, but are not suitable for use within a paragraph, as they will cause a paragraph break. See H:DIVSPAN for more details.
Font size definition by relative differences using words
The line heights of fonts greater than 100% increase proportionally with the font size. The line heights of fonts less than 100% are not proportional but inherit the line height of the font at the 100% size. The smaller the font, the greater the distance between rows of text. For these, see: Fonts smaller than 100% with proportional line heights. |
Inline template | Block template | Size | 12pt/16px default base[೧] |
Sample |
---|---|---|---|---|
{{xxxx-smaller}} | — | 41% | 5pt/6.7px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{xxx-smaller}} | — | 50% | 6pt/8px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{xx-smaller}} | {{xx-smaller block}} | 58% | 7pt/9px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{x-smaller}} | {{x-smaller block}} | 69% | 8pt/11px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{smaller}} | {{smaller block}} | 83% | 10pt/13px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{fine}} | {{fine block}} | 92% | 11pt/15px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
— | — | 100% | 12pt/16px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{m-larger}} | {{m-larger block}} | 110% | 13pt/18px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{larger}} | {{larger block}} | 120% | 14pt/19px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{x-larger}} | {{x-larger block}} | 144% | 17pt/23px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{xx-larger}} | {{xx-larger block}} | 182% | 22pt/29px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{xxx-larger}} | {{xxx-larger block}} | 207% | 25pt/33px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
{{xxxx-larger}} | {{xxxx-larger block}} | 249% | 30pt/40px | Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, |
- ↑ Contemporary web browsers have largely standardized on a default base font size of 12pt or 16px.