I was working on a bug ticket the other day where it was reported that an icon was sitting low in a button. Just not aligned like it should be. I had to go on a little journey to figure out how to replicate it before I could fix it. Lemme set the scene.
Here’s the screenshot:
But I go to look at the button on my machine, and it looks perfectly fine:
What the heck, right? Same platform (macOS), same browser (Firefox), same version, everything. Other people on the team looked too, and it was fine for them.
Then a discovery! (Thanks, Klare.)
It only showed up that way on her low-resolution external monitor. I don’t know if “low” is fair, but it’s not the “retina” of a MacBook Pro, whatever that is.
My problem is I don’t even have a monitor anymore that isn’t high resolution. So how I can test this? Maybe I just… can’t? Nope! I can! Check it out. I can “Get Info” on the Firefox app on my machine, and check this box:
Now I can literally see the bug. It is unique to Firefox as far as I can tell. Perhaps something to do with pixel… rounding? I have no idea. Here’s a reduced test case of the HTML/CSS at play though.
The solution? Rather than using an inline-block
display type for buttons, we moved to inline-flex
, which feels like the correct display type for buttons because of how good flexbox is at centering.
.button {
/* a million things so that all buttons are perfect and... */
display: inline-flex;
align-items: center;
}
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