I’m not sure if you can install stylus in mobile safari. However, even if you could, I left the mobile (portrait) view largely unchanged. I’ll eventually take a look at doing a proper mobile view, but I didn’t want to deal with that headache yet lol
I’m not sure if you can install stylus in mobile safari. However, even if you could, I left the mobile (portrait) view largely unchanged. I’ll eventually take a look at doing a proper mobile view, but I didn’t want to deal with that headache yet lol
Hmm… no matter what I do I can’t seem to replicate this… I’m going to make a top level comment in this thread later tonight or tomorrow and tag everyone who’s said they’re using the this stylesheet to ask for feedback on a few changes I’ve made that I keep going back and forth on. I’ll also include this issue, maybe someone else has experienced something similar or can figure out how I can configure my settings to replicate the issue… I’d really like to figure this out
Stylus is awesome! I recommend checking out DarkReader as well. Even if you don’t like dark mode, you might find it useful. It automatically recolors sites (by default, to a dark mode), but its highly configurable through various sliders and options that effect how themes are autogenerated.
When I go to a new website/app from desktop, the first thing I always do is tinker with darkreader, stylus, and whatever site settings exist to get a look and feel I like. :)
So, I threw that together right before bed as an experiment. As I mentioned in this comment it actually uses MORE space, but looks a little nicer imo… but yes, I had to do some really hacky stuff with the positioning to get it to work with the grid used for comments.
If you wouldn’t mind, could you provide a screenshot of the issue you’re experiencing and/or the code you changed to fix it? That way I could fix if for everyone :) Do you use a non-standard font-size?
I believe that option turns avatars off when looking at entry summaries (like when you’re on the main page, or on a page for a mag) but there isn’t a way to turn them off in the comments section.
I did actually end up making the comment section avatars larger so that I could put the voting controls under them right before I went to bed last night… thats one of the few places where my changes use up more space, but they give more of a reddit “feel” since doing that puts the vote controls close to where they were on reddit (old and new) and looks cleaner despite using more space…
idk how I feel about it, its technically less “slim” but looks a little prettier.
tagging @Lantech so they see this too
Thanks! I’ll look into making mobile tweaks eventually. Right now mobile should be identical to vanilla, other than the vote color changes.
Sure! Thanks for giving me a heads up, I haven’t looked at microblogs at all with this stylesheet yet. Luckily it doesn’t seem to break anything, but I’ll work on making it a little cleaner like the rest of the sheet tomorrow after work.
Yep! It should look good with any of the 5 kbin color themes.
Thank you! :)
I’m using the mobile web version of kbin for the first time right now and it’s pretty dang solid… I honestly might like it better than the desktop web interface. I spent this morning writing a stylus script to get something closer to old.reddit. (less whitespace, mostly, but a few other changes too)
Yeah! I don’t know how the new interface handles it, or how phone apps handle it, but on old.reddit I still see my list of multireddits on the left side of my main feed when I’m logged in.
I was kind of envisioning multimagazines and hubs as being two different things, where hubs would be created and joined by magazine mods, and then users would subscribe to hubs by default, where multimagazines would be user created and specific to that user, but one system could maybe do both…
That makes sense, but why isn’t kbin defederated then? I didn’t need to do anything other than supply an email when signing up for kbin.
Would be pretty cool if magazines/communities could form hubs around their subject. You could subscribe to the hub, and remove/add communities in the hub from other instances. And the community on your instance would control what instances are included by default in your hub sub.
Is kbin a good place to set up shop? I don’t really understand the advantages/disadvantages of different instances. I made an account on lemmy.world first, but I remade my account on kbin a few hours later because I like the kbin interface a little more.
Also, if there’s no karma, what are the “reputation points” in my profile?
Is there an easy way to shift an account between instances? Or do you need to start from scratch with a new account on each instance?
on top of that, beehaw has recently defederated with two of the biggest instances, lemmy.world and shitjustworks, meaning that moderation will probably be able to keep up more again
Why did beehaw defederate from these two instances in particular?
Here are the issues for me:
I think most of these problems have relatively straightforward fixes. As for the UX issues I’d like to see two things:
an instance which combines communities/magazines into “hubs” which users subscribe to simplify the UX. Users could can then tweak their hub experience by toggling which instances feed into their hubs. So instead of having kbin.social/m/news, lemm.ee/c/news, lemmy.world/c/news, etc… you just have something like /h/news and you can configure what’s included in /h/news. The mods of the instance’s community would determine which communities feed into the hub by default, but users could customize this as they wish.
Better cross-site user and reputation management. I’m not sure exactly how to make this work… but if, when you created an account on once instance, every instance its federated would somehow reserve or automatically create a matching account for you, then the anxiety around which instance to join can kind of melt away. The different instances could become windows into, effectively, the same account and same system.