Hi, Jason. It's been a while since this thread went quiet, but I just wanted to mention that I've been working on a test implementation of the Twitter Bootstrap framework [1] over the stock Evergreen OPAC - at this point for internal demo purposes. I also considered trying Foundation [2], but the implementation curve seemed a bit more involved for our current scope, so I chose Bootstrap.
I am of the opinion that adopting some type of a front-end framework may be the most efficient way to deliver a good presentation layer for all the types of browsers and screen sizes out there, as well as to keep up proactively with changes to browsers and emerging web standards. [1] http://twitter.github.io/bootstrap/ [2] http://foundation.zurb.com/ Aleksey On 2013-06-28, at 11:16 , "Boyer, Jason A" <[email protected]> wrote: > I'm trying to make sure I'm not duplicating a bunch of effort. I'm working on > making the opac more accessible on small screens. I saw a branch that Dan > Scott made available in April, but I've not seen anything on the list about > any similar work since. > > Here's what I'm hoping to do, in case it piques anyone else's interest: > Make the font-size entries relative, so that changing the body font-size > adjusts them all. > Use pt or mm for the body font-size rather than px. > Rearrange things so it's easier to use the My Account and holds features. > > Thanks > > Jason > > -- > Jason Boyer > Application Systems Analyst / Programmer Int. > Indiana State Library > 140 North Senate Ave. > Indianapolis, IN 46204 > http://library.in.gov/ > 317-234-2128 > Aleksey Lazar IS Developer and Integrator - PALS http://www.mnpals.org/
