>From: David G. Johnston <david.g.johns...@gmail.com>
>>On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 12:20 PM Kevin Brannen <mailto:kbran...@efji.com> >>wrote: >>Designing pages to the smallest media just frustrates those users on larger >>media (cue the many examples on the web where the left/right margins are so >>wide half of your screen is wasted instead of letting the text flow and >>resize).] >It is just as bad it is so wide that one has to move their head instead of >just moving their eyes. If anything our tables could probably be improved by >enforcing a maximum width to the content area. True on moving heads is harder, but we have the option of making the browser narrower to compensate if we feel the need. When there are max width constraints then the option to customize is taken out of the user's hands and that's an issue. Let the user do what works best for them. Some flexibility doesn't seem like to much to ask for...IMO. I really don't expect the old tables to come back, as much as I'd like that, because groups rarely backtrack or so my experience has been. However, this is also why I made the suggestions I did, especially the last one about adding more CSS classes to let the users restyle if they feel strongly enough about it. Maybe this works for most people: upper ( text ) → text Converts the string to all upper case, according to the rules of the database's locale. upper('tom') → TOM By why not let people do: upper ( text ) → text Converts the string to all upper case, according to the rules of the database's locale. upper('tom') → TOM [For those that don’t receive HTML in email, the function is bold, the return type is underlined, the example has a light gray background, and the example result has a light blue background.] I don’t know that I’d really do it that way, but the CSS required for that isn’t hard yet it makes the parts stand out a lot better so I know what is what. The current docs are only missing 3 CSS classes to allow me to do that: the description, the example code, and the example return (since it uses the same class as the function return value). I can’t imagine that would be so hard to do. I don’t see myself contributing to the Pg code base, but this is something I might could do and should look into. Kevin This e-mail transmission, and any documents, files or previous e-mail messages attached to it, may contain confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient, or a person responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, distribution, review, copy or use of any of the information contained in or attached to this message is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify us by reply e-mail, and destroy the original transmission and its attachments without reading them or saving them to disk. Thank you.