Never decrease
your font size just to cram everything onto a page.
Want to squeeze more words onto your screen when texting, or is the standard
font size just too small for you?
Not exact matches
The
font size is
just too small.
«We had one person who, because of the darkness of the polling site coupled with the
font size,
just gave up,» said NYPIRG spokesman Gene Russianoff.
Next you
just choose the label
size, color,
font, and an image from their «symbol» library, and BAM!
font>
< font size ="- 1"> Just try going over your profile.
font>
< font size ="- 1"> However, if you & rsquo; re not interested, its just manners to let them know where they stand.
I hate
fonts that call attention to themselves, and Helvetica is so clean and strong and elegant you can do almost anything with it
just by varying
sizes, colors, weights, spacing and placement.
Articulate Storyline can play
just as fine across all devices, providing player
font size up to 200 % for the visually challenged learners.
Now increase that
font by
just a single
size or two over the usual printed
size, and you are changing pages every few seconds.
The reader can change the
font size, and the book will
just reorganize itself.
I've been using a free application (TEQUILACAT, google it) that converts almost every book format to a format that any java compatible cell phone (most probably every color cell ever made) can handle and has many options such as custom
font size's, touch screen support, bookmarks, auto last place start - up and plenty more and I mean plenty more, I landed up spending about an hour to set it up
just the way I wanted it and its battery usage is negligible.
Fonts are available in six different styles and eight different
sizes, so you can read at
just the right
size for you.
You won't find the extensive ebook augmentation options in the Bebook Touch as you would in the Kindle, Nook, or Kobo line of readers, but the unit is perfectly acceptable for your average user who
just wants to change the
size of the
font and load in their own books.
I am forced to NOT use reflow, and because the PDF has margins on the left and right, the only way I can make the
font large enough to comfortably read is to rotate the document to landscape, increase the
font -
size a few notches,
just enough so I don't need to scroll left and right, but I still need to scroll down.
This reader is perfect for the book lover, because once you establish what
fonts and
sizes look best for you,
just turn the page.
The EPD is great, I can have my books collection with me and read for hours, and the battery barely drains, it's almost like reading a real book, the only difference is that you don't have the smell of the paper and you can change
font size and type;p,
just wish they release the Android Marshmallowm because right now the latest Android OS is Lollipop and that was the worst Android version ever.
It's OK to embed special
fonts for the chapter headers, but keep your body text and first paragraph text style simple; maybe
just set it as «serif», but don't set the colors or
sizes (except for 1em... and you can increase line spacing a little).
Text
font and
sizes can be customized to what is easy for your eyes and you get a page curl when turning pages
just like the real thing.
The Amazon Kindle reader for iPhones has competitive features like adjusting
font sizes though you're limited to
just five
font types with a choice of black text on white, reversed and in sepia look which many consider kindest to your eyes.
Formatting is tough to get to hold across all those devices, especially when readers can
just adjust
font size at a click.
It has adjustable
fonts with 8 text
sizes, 6
font styles, changeable background colors, line, and margin spacing options it
just seems so very user friendly at every possible level.
But I'm here to tell you that visual reading experience with the new Paperwhite display is not
just a home run, it's a walk - off grand slam, due to the combination of gorgeous hand - crafted
font and
font size choices, heightened resolution provided by 212 PPI pixel density compared with 167 PPI on previous eInk Kindles, and a patented new technology that distributes light far more evenly than we generally experience with ambient light and, in the bargain, allows for a vastly improved capacitative touch experience.
You can also adjust not
just font size, but also
font and background colors.
The ebook experience is fairly similar because even with the pint
sized screen you can
just increase the
fonts and still get the same content continuity.
6 ″ displays are
just too damn small to read comfortably, and if you have to increase the
font size for your eyesight it's bye - bye screen real - estate.
-- to change the
font -
size without opening the menu and the text settings,
just use the same pinch - to - zoom gesture you use to zoom in a pdf.
I can find my place, change the
font size, bookmark, and
just as importantly, I always know where my eBooks are!
Format the manuscript in a word document to
size 12 either Times Roman or Arial
font, no manual tabs, header top left (title and your name), page numbers beginning on page 2 bottom right, insert page breaks with every chapter, and a cover page with
just the title and your name.
Just an ereader with a screen large enough to see the digital equivalent of a whole page at a time with a readable
size font.
At
just 7.2 ounces in weight, the Paperwhite is easily held in one hand and its six - inch display is more than large enough to read dozens of words on a page, no matter what
font size you select.
Display rotation and a variety of available
font sizes are
just a few of the extra perks of this device.
I must say that the spanish review and especially the «hands - on» video sucks comparing to the-ebook-reader.com ones... there was no really info given on the interface, applications,
fonts and their
sizes available...
just one PDF opened and tts function showed....
This inventive theme features custom
fonts and colors, redesigned home screen, black and white icon set with
just a hint of color, high quality graphics, and a low file
size.
When highlighting a clipping, you can also highlight more words on a single page —
just by selecting a smaller
font size!
(Their web page also notes the Kindle's storage capacity of over 1,000 books, «making heavy backpacks lighter,» and that each Kindle has a built - in dictionary which «supports real - time vocabulary development, while adjustable
fonts and text
sizes make each book
just right for a child's eyes and reading ability.»)
I'll be looking at a
font that is
just slightly too small for comfortable reading, but if I choose the next
size up it's huge — like «can't fit a full sentence on one screen» huge.
Although Kindles need a whole lot more than
just more
font sizes, they need a complete remake of their software that while good is painstakingly boring and limiting, and I thougt iphones were dull!
And
just like the PRS - 300, it has 5 adjustable
font sizes to customize your reading experience.
I recently started having a problem with the
font sizes on my fire hd, don't know if there was a software update or my eyes
just suddenly got worse.
I
just checked and the largest
font size on the Kobo Aura One is much larger than the largest
font size on the Kindle Paperwhite, but Kobos don't have landscape mode if that matters.
I like to see the book in print before I officially publish it —
just to make sure the cover looks ok, the
font size works out, and all the margins look ok.
You can swipe to turn pages,
just like a real book, highlight phrases, lookup words, zoom images, increase
font sizes and more!
Turn pages, look up words, highlight passages, adjust the
font size and style -
just by tapping the infrared - powered touchscreen.
Just one look at any 15th or 16th century manuscript will reveal the fallacy of your argument: no punctuation,
fonts styles and
sizes all over the place, variations in spelling from instance of a word to the next, line run together, spread out, cut off... you name it.
The buttons jump you to the table of contents, let you search for a word or passage within a book, help you move to a specific page within a book using a slider (and kudos to B&N for including here
just how many pages are left in the chapter), or allow you to adjust text options (you can choose from six not - so - different
fonts and seven very different
font sizes).
But for me, I
just don't want to read skinny little magazine column
sized lines (especially since I can not use the tiny
fonts), so the most important dimension is width.
As mentioned in
just about every Kobo vs Kindle comparisons review that I've done, one of the biggest differences with Kobo's software is they offer more
font choices and
font sizes, with a custom boldness slider, and they offer more layout tools and you can sideload TTF and OTF
fonts.
It also completely replaces words it sees instead of
just adding overlays, all while trying to match the same
font, color, background, and text
size.»
Font Size: press the «Aa» button just right of the space bar, and a menu will come up that allows you to select one of 8 font sizes, three typefaces («regular,» «condensed,» and my favorite, «sans serif»), line spacing («small,» my favorite «medium,» or «large»), and words per line (which sets the side margins; I use «default&raqu
Font Size: press the «Aa» button
just right of the space bar, and a menu will come up that allows you to select one of 8
font sizes, three typefaces («regular,» «condensed,» and my favorite, «sans serif»), line spacing («small,» my favorite «medium,» or «large»), and words per line (which sets the side margins; I use «default&raqu
font sizes, three typefaces («regular,» «condensed,» and my favorite, «sans serif»), line spacing («small,» my favorite «medium,» or «large»), and words per line (which sets the side margins; I use «default»).