https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=252134 Summary: Seamonkey Navigator scale problem Product: openSUSE 10.2 Version: Final Platform: x86 OS/Version: Other Status: NEW Severity: Normal Priority: P5 - None Component: Other AssignedTo: bnc-team-screening@forge.provo.novell.com ReportedBy: nteknikk@monet.no QAContact: qa@suse.de Opening some web pages in Seamoneky does scale too large, and put a horizontal scrollbar at bottom on the browser's window. It is neihter possible to manually scale down these pages to fit within the browser window's width. Opening the same pages in Firefox do scale correctly. I've experienced the same problem with Seamonkey 1.0.6, 1.1b and now the latest 1.1.1, in openSUSE 10.1, 10.2 and Win2k. I don't remember if the same scale problem did appear in the first 1.0x versions. And I haven't found out if I may have som legacy preferences that cause this odd behaviour. But it does no matter if the View>TextZoom is set to 100% or lower on opening these pages. Neither manual Ctrl+- does scale down the page. As a typical illustration and test example is opening a central bank home page at www.skandiabanken.no Changing View>TextZoom to 100% - doesn't change the scale 120% - doesn't change the scale 150% - doesn't change the scale 200% - does enlarge the scale Neither Ctrl+- does reduce the scale compared with the initial opened image. Therefore it looks like the default page scale is opened with 150% and cannot be schrinked. Attached is a screenshot file: seamonkey_firefox_skandiabanken.jpg The upper halph of the image shows a Seamonkey window with the same width as the the Firefox window on the lower halph. In both browser's the url above www.skandiabanken.no is opened. The home page fit correctly in Firefox, but is too wide in Seamonkey, which put a horizontal scrollbar on the window. And the latter cannot be scaled down. -- Configure bugmail: https://bugzilla.novell.com/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is.