• kt1wporg

    (@kt1wporg)


    Hi there,

    I have noticed that after using the “Gutenberg: Display of the drop cap”, Some letters appear a bit larger and are actually blocking texts below or to the top of them. See the link attached.

    The page I need help with: [log in to see the link]

Viewing 9 replies - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
  • Moderator Samuel Wood (Otto)

    (@otto42)

    www.ads-software.com Admin

    It’s a bit hard to tell what the cause is because of the CSS compression. Try turning off the autoptimize plugin.

    herbie888

    (@herbie888)

    @kt1wporg The effect can be reproduced in www.ads-software.com/gutenberg/ demo with Google Chrome. Firefox seems to work fine.

    Thread Starter kt1wporg

    (@kt1wporg)

    @herbie888, is this means that it is a browser issue? Since you said that it is displaying fine with Firefox?

    herbie888

    (@herbie888)

    @kt1wporg You could test it with a few browsers and report an issue here.

    The relevant CSS is somewhere in /wp-content/plugins/gutenberg/build/block-library/style.css – the CSS compression there is from Gutenberg, not from Autoptimize.

    p.has-drop-cap:not(:focus):first-letter {
        float: left;
        font-size: 8.4em;
        font-style: normal;
        font-weight: 100;
        line-height: .68;
        margin: .05em .1em 0 0;
        text-transform: uppercase;
    }
    Optimizing Matters

    (@optimizingmatters)

    for future reference; you can disable Autoptimize on a per-request basis by adding ?ao_noptimize=1 to the URL.

    hope this helps debugging,
    frank (ao dev)

    Thread Starter kt1wporg

    (@kt1wporg)

    Hi @herbie888

    I test this on Safari, Chrome and Firefox. Only in Firefox that it seems to be displaying fine. This is an issue related to some browsers or it’s a solely Gutenberg issue?

    Furthermore, above you said that “the effect can be reproduced in www.ads-software.com/gutenberg/ demo with Google Chrome. Firefox seems to work fine.” This is means that it is a Gutenberg issue which is conflicting with other applications?

    NOW, the code you posted above and which you said is located somewhere in /wp-content/plugins/gutenberg/build/block-library/style.css. Should I add it in the CSS file of Gutenberg [and not of Autoptimize] in that location? And after a Gutenberg update [which I believe the will be in due course], should I keep on going to this location and add this code? Or the next update of Gutenberg would have this code embedded in the CSS file?

    Thread Starter kt1wporg

    (@kt1wporg)

    Hi Frank & @optimizingmatters

    You said that “for future reference; you can disable Autoptimize on a per-request basis by adding ?ao_noptimize=1 to the URL“. How do I do it? Or where exactly can I disable “Autoptimize on a per-request basis”? Please clarify with details that will enable me to make those changes.

    Optimizing Matters

    (@optimizingmatters)

    This is not a “fix”, but a trick to troubleshoot CSS or JS issues by disabling AO for a specific page by adding ?ao_noptimize=1 to the URL in your browser address bar. this allows you to see the original JS/ CSS and .. troubleshoot ??

    herbie888

    (@herbie888)

    @kt1wporg It is obviously a bug in Gutenberg, report an issue if you feel like.

Viewing 9 replies - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
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