Hi Daniel, Thanks for quick reply.
On Fri, 3 May 2013 14:48:30 -0400, Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote: > > On 05/03/2013 02:33 PM, Christophe TROESTLER wrote: > > Package: iceweasel > > Version: 20.0-1 > > Severity: minor > > > On the page http://dlmf.nist.gov/10.14 the vertical bars denoting the > > absolute values are too thick. They render well in other browsers > > like Chromium. > > attached is my view (with iceweasel 20.0-1 on a debian wheezy/sid amd64 > machine) of Kapteyn's Inequality of that page. > > the vertical bars denoting absolute value in that equation appear to be > one pixel thick to me. i'm not sure how much thinner they could be > without disappearing. 1 pixel is good. > maybe this is due to some other problem, configuration option, > co-installed package, font, extension, or something else? > > can you replicate the problem with a clean browser profile? > > iceweasel -no-remote --safe-mode -ProfileManager With this (even removing “--safe-mode”), I cannot reproduce the problem. It seems to be linked to the following line in prefs.js: user_pref("font.mathfont-family", "CMR10, CMSY10, CMEX10, CMMI10, Symbol"); Copying prefs.js to the clean profile and adding (resp. removing) this line triggers (resp. sloves) the bug. However, on my main profile, if I remove this line and start iceweasel, it is automatically added again to prefs.js! I added a screenshot to show how it looks on my machine.
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