User:The Rooster/Sandpit/10: Difference between revisions

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(BIC Bot testing, middle third of DR's)
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This is a manually recovered list of building danger reports, taken from the danger report userspace, with the suburb and assorted odd reports removed from checking. This list is a few weeks old and does not contain new reports from all users, but does contain reports I have created to fix others for whatever reason as I have cleaned up the userspace.


This is the middle third (412/1236) of the reports, limited due to inclusion limits. This will be used for the BIC Status Bot, currently it serves as a one stop page to get information about the timestamp, rather than having to check each report individually.
{{User:DangerReport/Mainstone Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mallard Library|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mallard Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Maney Lane Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Marcellus General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Marchetti Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Marcus General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mare Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Margaret General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Margaret General Hospital (Edgecombe)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Margaret General Hospital (Ridleybank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Marshment Place Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Martha General Hospital (Danversbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Martha General Hospital (Havercroft)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Martland Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Marven Mall|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Masey Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Matraves Crescent Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Matthias General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Maul Row Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mayo Row Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/McDonald Drive Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/McNeil Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Meeker Plaza School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Meetcham Drive Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Megamax Cinema|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mellish Walk Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Membry Lane Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Merchant Crescent Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Merewether Road Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Merryweather Way Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mesney Drive Railway Station (Dentonside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Methodius General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Methringham Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Midelton Crescent Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Milard Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Millerd Walk Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Millington Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Milverton Place Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mitchem Mall|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Moggridge Place Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Monck Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Moorse Cinema|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mores Lane Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Morley Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Morton Lane Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Mudford Plaza Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Muirhead Avenue Railway Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Muirhead Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Neave Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Neot General Hospital (North Blythville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Nichols Mall|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Normandare Boulevard Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Nott Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Nunn Row Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Nuth Row Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Nuttycombe Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Oake Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Oatley Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Odo General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Olivey Library|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Oram Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Orders Crescent Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Ostrehan Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Oswald General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Page Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Parkhouse Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Parr Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Parrott Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Patriarch General Hospital (Barrville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pegrum Place Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pellatt Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Perrie Square Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Peter General Hospital (Crowbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Peter General Hospital (Tollyton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Peterson Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Philips Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Piegsa Place Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pinchen Road Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pincher Library|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Piran General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pitman Mansion|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Podger Avenue School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pole Mall|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pollet Street Railway Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pollitt Street School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Polwhiele Way Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pooll Crescent Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pople Place School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Poultney Street Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Powlett Road Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pownall Street School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pratley Road Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Prickett Street Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pring Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Priscott Cinema|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Promel Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Puckard Cinema|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pullin Avenue School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pullinger Auto Repair (Crowbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Purchas Grove Police Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pyke Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pyle Crescent School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Pyncombes Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Quartly Library|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Ramsden Way Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rawkins Row Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rawlins Row Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Reakes Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Reason Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Reginaldus Plaza Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Remigius General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Retallick Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Richard General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Ridge Avenue Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rillie Cinema|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Roadnight Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Robertson Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rodges Stadium|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rodman Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rollason Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rounds Boulevard Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Runciman Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Rundle Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sadley Way Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sage Way Railway Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Samborne Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Samborne Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sanford Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Schreiber Drive Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Screech Row Police Station (Borehamwood)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sedgbeer Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sellek Way Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Servatius General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Shadwick Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Shapr Boulevard Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Shaw Avenue Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sheehan Lane Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Shipp Way School|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Shufflebotham Boulevard Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Shyar Cinema|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Silverius General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Silvey Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Simplicius General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sires Boulevard Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sixtus General Hospital (East Grayside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sixtus General Hospital (Heytown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sixtus General Hospital (Mornington)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Skarin Row Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sly Place Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Smith Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Snaydon Walk Railway Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Snell Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Solomon Lane Police Department (Houldenbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Somerside Drive Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Southall Mansion|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Spicer Row Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Spinney Alley Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Sprackling Square Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Spry Road Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Abraham's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Adrian's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Agnes's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Aidan's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Alban's Hospital (Rhodenbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Alban's Hospital (Starlingtown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Alcuin's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Alexander's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Alfred's Hospital (Rhodenbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Aloysius's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Anacletus's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Andrew's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Arnold's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Barbara's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Barnabas's Church (North Blythville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Barnabas's Church (Spracklingbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Bartholomew's Hospital (Dakerstown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Bartholomew's Hospital (Pescodside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Basil's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Benedict's Hospital (Peppardville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Benedict's Hospital (Pitneybank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Benedict's Hospital (Quarlesbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Birinus's Church (Huntley Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Boniface's Hospital (Tollyton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Bruno's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Columbanus's Hospital (Lerwill Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Columbanus's Hospital (Randallbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Columbanus's Hospital (Santlerville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Cyril's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Deusdedit's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Dionysius's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Dymphna's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Egbert's Church (Barrville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Elisabeth's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Elisabeth's Hospital (Pegton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Ethelbert's Hospital (Roftwood)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Eutychian's Hospital (Darvall Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Faustina's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Ferreol's Hospital (Dartside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Ferreol's Hospital (Kempsterbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Francis's Hospital (Miltown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Gall's Church (Pennville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. George's Hospital (Greentown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. George's Hospital (Kempsterbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. George's Hospital (Ridleybank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Gregory's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Helena's Hospital (Roachtown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Helier's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Henry's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Herman's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Holy's Church (Starlingtown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Hubertus's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Humphrey's Hospital (Old Arkham)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Innocent's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Isidore's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Jeremy's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Joachim's Church (Huntley Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Joachim's Church (Starlingtown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Joachim's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Joachim's hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. John's Cathedral|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. John's Hospital (Brooksville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. John's Hospital (Gibsonton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. John's Hospital (Lockettside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Joseph's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Jude's Cathedral|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Jude's Hospital (Ridleybank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Julius's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Laurence's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Lazar's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Lazarus's Church (Paynterton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Louis's Hospital (Chancelwood)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Louis's Hospital (Edgecombe)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Luke's Cathedral|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Luke's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Marcus's Church (Huntley Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Margaret's Church (Wray Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Mark's Cathedral|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Mark's Hospital (Rhodenbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Mark's Hospital (Richmond Hills)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matheos's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matthew's Cathedral|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matthew's Hospital (Dartside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matthew's Hospital (Pegton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matthew's Hospital (Santlerville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matthias's Church (Dakerstown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Matthias's Church (Ketchelbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Maurice's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Maximillian's Church (Gatcombeton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Maximillian's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Methodius's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Ninian's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Odile's Hospital (Dunningwood)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Osyth's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Paschal's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Patrick's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Patrick's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Perpetua's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Philomena's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Pius's Church (Paynterton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Pius's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Polycarp's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Romuald's Church (Raines Hills)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Seraphim's Hospital (Fryerbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Seraphim's Hospital (Grigg Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Seraphim's Hospital (Pashenton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Seraphim's Hospital (Wray Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Simon's Hospital (Ridleybank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Siricius's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Soter's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Spyridon's Hospital (Santlerville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Spyridon's Hospital (Scarletwood)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Symmachus's Church (Barrville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Telesphorous's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Tsarevna's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Werburgh's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Wilfrid's Hospital (Barrville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. William's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Willibrord's Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Wolfeius's Church|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Wolfgang's Hospital (Grigg Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/St. Wolfgang's Hospital (Wray Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Stadling Walk Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Standfield Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Statham Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Stembridge Crescent Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Stickling Mall|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Stirling Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Stoy Avenue Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Strange Bank|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Stranger Grove Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Strutt Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Suter Boulevard Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Swabey Grove Railway Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Swansborough Road Fire Station|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Swearse Lane Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Tanner Auto Repair|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Tarasius General Hospital (Lerwill Heights)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Tarasius General Hospital (Spicer Hills)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Taswell Towers|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Teek Boulevard Police Department|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/Teresa General Hospital|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Amos Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Angerstein Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Anglin Arms|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Anstruther Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Antell Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Anthony Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Argile Arms|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Ashwin Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Attwell Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Axtence Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Backer Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bagnall Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Balchin Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Barrow Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Barstow Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Barter Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Barwood Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bascombe Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bath Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Beale Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Beater Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Beer Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bellamy Building (West Grayside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Belsten Arms|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bennett Building (Pegton)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bentley Hotel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Beville Hotel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bewley Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Blackmore Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Blocksidge Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Boddy Motel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bornard Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Boulting Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bowell Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Braddick Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Brazey Building (Buttonville)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Breay Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Brennand Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bridgman Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Brittan Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Brockliss Building (Spicer Hills)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Browne Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Buckett Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Bucknall Motel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Buckrell Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Burfield Motel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Butson Arms|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Buttle Building (Dakerstown)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Button Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Caffin Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Canner Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cantle Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Carew Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Carle Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Carlyle Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cartwright Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Casely Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Catcott Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cater Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Chadburn Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Chaffin Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Challes Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cheatle Motel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cheeke Building (Eastonwood)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cheeke Building (Ruddlebank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Chetham Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Christensen Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Chudley Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Clatworthy Arms|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Claxton Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Clayton Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Clewett Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Colglough Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Copeland Building (West Grayside)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cork Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Cottrell Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Coutts Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Craddy Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Craigie Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Crampton Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Crang Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Craske Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Creek Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Culling Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Curme Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Curme Building (Molebank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Curtis Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Custard Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dafforn Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Daniels Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Darnell Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Daubeney Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Davies Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Delamont Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Delay Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Denning Museum|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Denty Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Devonshire Building (Rhodenbank)|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dewell Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dewes Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Digby Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dirkinson Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dobbs Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dobson Motel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Donovan Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Donovan Motel|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Dooley Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Doubting Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Downes Building|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}
{{User:DangerReport/The Draper Arms|template=User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6}}

Revision as of 21:28, 27 February 2009

This is a manually recovered list of building danger reports, taken from the danger report userspace, with the suburb and assorted odd reports removed from checking. This list is a few weeks old and does not contain new reports from all users, but does contain reports I have created to fix others for whatever reason as I have cleaned up the userspace.

This is the middle third (412/1236) of the reports, limited due to inclusion limits. This will be used for the BIC Status Bot, currently it serves as a one stop page to get information about the timestamp, rather than having to check each report individually.

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

User:DangerReport/Margaret General Hospital Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

User:DangerReport/Methodius General Hospital Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

User:DangerReport/Purchas Grove Police Station Actually, yet more investigation yields the fact FF takes x-small as 10px, but IE as 10.05px AND IE appears to have a cumulative rounding error problem to boot. 90% would still just about round down but IE thinks otherwise. 85% still seems the best option for getting any level of consistency in this regard.


It appears that main.css defines a font-size of x-small. Then later another class boosts this by 127% (why 127? god knows)

Both browsers appear to take x-small as 10px on default settings. Thus render a default size of 12.7px which gets rounded to 13px. FF appears to get it right at 12.7px. IE likes 12.8px better (rounding error after so many levels?)

Whilst these both round to 13px nominally, it might explain some of differences when applying another layer inline.

For example, an additional value of 90% inline would result in 11.43 for FF, but 11.52 for IE, so FF goes for 11px and IE 12px.

In this case, scaling values can be chosen, but need merely be carefully picked to avoid values that generate these differentiating results.


The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. x-small * 127%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. as before*90%

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 11px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 12px

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 13px

User:The Rooster/Sandpit/6

User:DangerReport/Pyncombes Auto Repair User:DangerReport/Quartly Library User:DangerReport/Ramsden Way Fire Station User:DangerReport/Rawkins Row Police Department User:DangerReport/Rawlins Row Police Department User:DangerReport/Reakes Towers User:DangerReport/Reason Towers User:DangerReport/Reginaldus Plaza Fire Station User:DangerReport/Remigius General Hospital User:DangerReport/Retallick Walk Police Department User:DangerReport/Richard General Hospital User:DangerReport/Ridge Avenue Fire Station User:DangerReport/Rillie Cinema User:DangerReport/Roadnight Towers User:DangerReport/Robertson Walk Police Department User:DangerReport/Rodges Stadium User:DangerReport/Rodman Auto Repair User:DangerReport/Rollason Towers User:DangerReport/Rounds Boulevard Police Department User:DangerReport/Runciman Towers User:DangerReport/Rundle Auto Repair User:DangerReport/Sadley Way Fire Station User:DangerReport/Sage Way Railway Station User:DangerReport/Samborne Towers User:DangerReport/Samborne Walk Police Department User:DangerReport/Sanford Towers User:DangerReport/Schreiber Drive Police Department User:DangerReport/Screech Row Police Station (Borehamwood) User:DangerReport/Sedgbeer Auto Repair User:DangerReport/Sellek Way Fire Station User:DangerReport/Servatius General Hospital User:DangerReport/Shadwick Walk Police Department User:DangerReport/Shapr Boulevard Police Department User:DangerReport/Shaw Avenue Fire Station User:DangerReport/Sheehan Lane Police Department User:DangerReport/Shipp Way School User:DangerReport/Shufflebotham Boulevard Fire Station User:DangerReport/Shyar Cinema User:DangerReport/Silverius General Hospital User:DangerReport/Silvey Towers User:DangerReport/Simplicius General Hospital User:DangerReport/Sires Boulevard Police Department User:DangerReport/Sixtus General Hospital (East Grayside) User:DangerReport/Sixtus General Hospital (Heytown) User:DangerReport/Sixtus General Hospital (Mornington) User:DangerReport/Skarin Row Police Department 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Hospital (Lerwill Heights) User:DangerReport/Tarasius General Hospital (Spicer Hills) User:DangerReport/Taswell Towers User:DangerReport/Teek Boulevard Police Department User:DangerReport/Teresa General Hospital User:DangerReport/The Amos Building User:DangerReport/The Angerstein Building User:DangerReport/The Anglin Arms User:DangerReport/The Anstruther Building User:DangerReport/The Antell Building User:DangerReport/The Anthony Building User:DangerReport/The Argile Arms User:DangerReport/The Ashwin Building User:DangerReport/The Attwell Building User:DangerReport/The Axtence Building User:DangerReport/The Backer Building User:DangerReport/The Bagnall Building User:DangerReport/The Balchin Building User:DangerReport/The Barrow Building User:DangerReport/The Barstow Building User:DangerReport/The Barter Building User:DangerReport/The Barwood Building User:DangerReport/The Bascombe Building User:DangerReport/The Bath Building User:DangerReport/The Beale Building User:DangerReport/The Beater Building User:DangerReport/The Beer Building User:DangerReport/The Bellamy Building (West Grayside) User:DangerReport/The Belsten Arms User:DangerReport/The Bennett Building (Pegton) User:DangerReport/The Bentley Hotel User:DangerReport/The Beville Hotel User:DangerReport/The Bewley Building User:DangerReport/The Blackmore Building User:DangerReport/The Blocksidge Building User:DangerReport/The Boddy Motel User:DangerReport/The Bornard Building User:DangerReport/The Boulting Building User:DangerReport/The Bowell Museum User:DangerReport/The Braddick Building User:DangerReport/The Brazey Building (Buttonville) User:DangerReport/The Breay Building User:DangerReport/The Brennand Building User:DangerReport/The Bridgman Building User:DangerReport/The Brittan Building User:DangerReport/The Brockliss Building (Spicer Hills) User:DangerReport/The Browne Building User:DangerReport/The Buckett Building User:DangerReport/The Bucknall Motel User:DangerReport/The Buckrell Building User:DangerReport/The Burfield Motel User:DangerReport/The Butson Arms User:DangerReport/The Buttle Building (Dakerstown) User:DangerReport/The Button Building User:DangerReport/The Caffin Building User:DangerReport/The Canner Building User:DangerReport/The Cantle Building User:DangerReport/The Carew Museum User:DangerReport/The Carle Building User:DangerReport/The Carlyle Building User:DangerReport/The Cartwright Building User:DangerReport/The Casely Building User:DangerReport/The Catcott Building User:DangerReport/The Cater Building User:DangerReport/The Chadburn Museum User:DangerReport/The Chaffin Building User:DangerReport/The Challes Building User:DangerReport/The Cheatle Motel User:DangerReport/The Cheeke Building (Eastonwood) User:DangerReport/The Cheeke Building (Ruddlebank) User:DangerReport/The Chetham Building User:DangerReport/The Christensen Building User:DangerReport/The Chudley Building User:DangerReport/The Clatworthy Arms User:DangerReport/The Claxton Museum User:DangerReport/The Clayton Building User:DangerReport/The Clewett Building User:DangerReport/The Colglough Building User:DangerReport/The Copeland Building (West Grayside) User:DangerReport/The Cork Building User:DangerReport/The Cottrell Building User:DangerReport/The Coutts Building User:DangerReport/The Craddy Building User:DangerReport/The Craigie Building User:DangerReport/The Crampton Building User:DangerReport/The Crang Building User:DangerReport/The Craske Museum User:DangerReport/The Creek Building User:DangerReport/The Culling Building User:DangerReport/The Curme Building User:DangerReport/The Curme Building (Molebank) User:DangerReport/The Curtis Building User:DangerReport/The Custard Museum User:DangerReport/The Dafforn Building User:DangerReport/The Daniels Museum User:DangerReport/The Darnell Building User:DangerReport/The Daubeney Building User:DangerReport/The Davies Building User:DangerReport/The Delamont Building User:DangerReport/The Delay Building User:DangerReport/The Denning Museum User:DangerReport/The Denty Building User:DangerReport/The Devonshire Building (Rhodenbank) User:DangerReport/The Dewell Building User:DangerReport/The Dewes Building User:DangerReport/The Digby Building User:DangerReport/The Dirkinson Building User:DangerReport/The Dobbs Building User:DangerReport/The Dobson Motel User:DangerReport/The Donovan Building User:DangerReport/The Donovan Motel User:DangerReport/The Dooley Building User:DangerReport/The Doubting Building User:DangerReport/The Downes Building User:DangerReport/The Draper Arms