Youcan create your own links that specify arbitrary dimensions. Start with " ", append the width, an "x" as the delimiter and finally the height. A "!" at the end makes the browser go back to the page that you were previously on.
Yep, I tested the SetViewPortSize within scripts which works great but if connecting to a remote server which is already going to be configured to have a screen resolution size, it would be nice if I could just set a viewport size globally in Katalon for select browser (local testing) same as remote, instead of having to make sure SetViewPortSize is added to each script.
I did look at Desired Capabilities, but I could not get anything to size browser window following any Katalon docs on WebUI Viewport sizing, I tried various items/values but nothing was working for me.
Did we ever figure out what the correct arguments are for Safari? This is really hosing my scripts having such a small Safari window open up. Also, my arguments are the exact same for Firefox as Chrome. However, Firefox does not seem to be respecting them. I guess the arguments are the same for headless Chrome and Firefox, as well?
my local system resolution is 1920 * 1080 windows 10 but remote server is of windows 7 with 1360* 768. Some test cases fails on running it. Tried above mentioned steps in version 7.2.9 still remains in same resolution and fails.
The text on my site gets smaller whenever I make the browser bigger. I realize this is intentional, but it totally disrupts the design of my site and I don't like how it looks. I'd rather maintain the text sizes / proportions if possible. I'm using 7.1 by the way.
In the Site Styles -> Fonts menu, you will probably see your heading sizes set to rem values, if you want you can type in px values which are absolute rather than responsive, but you will have to be careful not to go too big for mobile. Alternatively, you can add Custom CSS like this that will just affect the desktop site and control that manually:
Google recently rolled out updates for their Developer Tools, before these updates the screen height & width used to appear in the top right of the website preview when scaling the developer tools, but now there's no way to find out the screen size (example below)?
I came across this trying to figure this out and couldn't find device mode as per Danamorah's answer. So I thought I would help save some time for a newbie and screen shot the icon to click so you can get measurements.
Then when you select an element (body or html) you can get the size of the element with a ruler on the x and y of the browser. This will not be the same as your browser window though if your content is wider than the browser.It's inconvenient because it doesn't show you the size of the browser as you are resizing like it used to. Hopefully the original feature comes back.
We went from 4.0 to 7.0. Now the imbedded browser window graphics is too large for the window it is in. I changed the % size of the main window display in Options but this had no affect on the relative size of the graphics within the window. I have tried other Options settings and not found anything to help. It is the same regardless of the monitor size and/or display resolution as well.
Hello everyone,
I am a new user to qualtrics and going through the tutorials, but I had a basic question. I know you can capture the screen resolution, but can you also record a survey takers browser window size? If so how?
I thought it might be after reading this: -app-feedback/intercepts-tab/edit-intercept-section/action-set-logic/user-info-conditions/
Right now now if I change the width of the browser to be 1280px a piece of the background-image is cut off and if I make it 1366px the container is too far apart from the background-image. I am sure there is a more efficient way of doing this than to add many @media queries.
If you place the code in a button Action event, you will be able to measure manually after resizing. If the value is correct, that can allow a workaround with a timer that monitors the size of the window.
I recently discovered that my LMS (LearnUpon) defaults to the browser window height and width, which is generally fine. However, for users on widescreen monitors, this makes them have to do a lot more scrolling and does not allow them to see all the content that was intended to be seen at once without having to scroll.
I can set width and height in pixels in the LMS, and I have tested it out a bit, but it's obviously different from one monitor to another. Just thought I would check here to see if anyone had a recommended size that works well.
Having said that, it might be hard to anticipate the width and height of your users. So instead of using a specific width and height, is there an option to set the browser size to full screen? That might be a better alternative to setting an actual pixel value.
All Tor browser users are asked to surf pages using the default window size. So if you follow this practice, you are just like other users; I mean the screen resolution won't be used as a factor to identify you.
Using an unusual screen resolution was sufficient to identify me uniquely to panopticlick. With my portrait mode screen resolution of 1200 wide by 1920 high, the default window size of 1000x1765 was unique, no resizing or maximizing needed.
Perhaps it's worth mentioning that the impact of resizing your browser on your privacy heavily depends on what window size you set. Maximizing Tor browser on a screen with a standard resolution like 1280x1024 or 1080p is not too bad - lost of people have screens like that, and you probably won't end up being the only one with that resolution. The adversary will still be able to tell that you're running Tor on a desktop PC rather than laptop - those often have WXGA resolution, or something model-specific which is worse if you want to stay private.
The worst thing you can do is to resize the Tor browser manually to a random size instead of maximizing it. The adversary won't have a clue about the hardware you're running on, but you will probably be the only person with that browser size on each site you visit. This means your activity can be tracked - the adversary will know that sites A, B and C were visited by the same person (you), despite the fact that Tor used three different IPs to access those sites.
EDIT: One thing I would like to add here: running a browser with JavaScript support with Tor is something I wouldn't do at all. Screen size aside, JavaScript provides numerous options for tracking. For example, Google is able to distinguish users from bots by the way you click on a button, and that same algorithm could probably be tuned to identify individual users as well.
Client-side code (JavaScript) on a web site you visit has access to screen resolution and other settings. Often the combination of these settings are unique enough to match your current session (which may be protected by tor) with some other session that is not protected by Tor. Following the fingerprint analogy, if you use Tor but have a non-default window size, it can be unique enough that it is like you are leaving a fingerprint at a web site you visit. And with that fingerprint, they can track you to other web sites.
... and just to clarify "track": if you go from their page X to their page Y, they can tell that somebody with the same resolution visited both pages, and maybe with enough information (see @Begueradj answer above) they could even guess correctly whether or not it was the same person.
... but they wouldn't necessarily know (from that alone) who that person was. They can't really track you across different web sites (unless they host both sites), and they'd need to piece together with something else to figure out who it actually was. Though the three different IP addresses might tell them it's a TOR user.
When previewing a responsive page in Chrome or Firefox (at least to begin with), I would like constant feedback on the browser window size (in pixels) so I can see how the page responds to resizing as well as at specific widths. Can anyone recommend browser extensions that accomplish this? (I know DW gives a Live Preview but I'd also like doublecheck how the page behaves in a regular browser.)
Thanks Ben - I have been doing that but thought there might be an add-on that showed screen-size live, up to full width, without going in to Developer Mode (which takes me to only 1679 of a possible 1900). But I can live with that.
But sometimes those settings makes things a bit weird, and if that's the case you should check the Properties (aka Egenskaper) for the Inventor.exe file (right-click it), and try some different combinations.
Svr avvgning!
Knns nd som just trd menyn till vnster har en mycket mindre grafiskt grnssnitt n alla andra Windows appar.
Drmmen vore om man kunde manipulera storleken p trd och menyer bttre
Fr skaffa 1 par "Inventor glasgon" och 1 par "Windows glasgon"
Difficult balance!
It still feels like the tree menu on the left has a much smaller graphical interface than all other Windows apps.
The dream would be if I could manipulate the size of trees and menus better
I need to get 1 pair of "Inventor glasses" and 1 pair of "Windows glasses"
Scaling the Display setting from 100% to 125% is great for other programs like Outlook,Word etc.
With Inventor menues/browser are just crisper in 100% and when working long days it is more relaxing for the eyes.
I've been using firefox as my default browser since it started, but yesterday it started getting weird.I open the browser and rather than open to the size of my monitor it opened to 1/4 size, next time I opened the browser it opened normally, next time 1/4 size and so on.I've looked at settings and it looks ok (not that I've changed anything recently)When it opens 1/4 size I click the top right to open full size and the 1/4 size browser moves from te left side to the right, the I click the top right full screen and it opens full screen with tools.Really weird! Has there been a screwy update?
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