It doesn't seem to change the font weight of the smaller text. I'm just 
trying to understand what the point is of a theme that makes the 
easy-to-read stuff even bigger/heavier and easier-to-read, but ignores the 
small stuff. All I can say is, wait until you need reading 
glasses/bifocals. ;-)

Changing the font-size from the menu, or any of the other settings for that 
matter, is awkward because the fonts change WHILE you are typing, meaning 
you can easily lose your place. I've got a configuration tiddler that I 
want to post that will let you dial-in fonts and and width settings and 
then save the configuration.

Merry Holiday Seasons Greetings,
Mark

On Friday, December 30, 2016 at 7:40:51 AM UTC-8, Jeremy Ruston wrote:
>
> Hi Mark
>
> The new "Heavier" theme seems to only make the stuff that is already big 
> (titles, headlines, bold text) bigger. The ordinary text stays the same 
> size. For my poor eyes, it's the small stuff that needs to get bigger. 
> Perhaps it works differently on other browsers?
>
>
> The “Heavier” theme doesn’t actually change the size of any of the text, 
> it just changes the font weight. That’s intentional, but perhaps what you 
> really want is a “Bigger” theme that bumps up the font sizes of everything. 
> The reason that I didn’t bother to create such a theme is that I assumed 
> that people would use the browser font size controls. Do they not do the 
> job for you?
>
> Best wishes
>
> Jeremy
>
>
> Mark (Windows 7, Firefox 47)
>
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, October 18, 2016 at 6:01:16 AM UTC-7, Jeremy Ruston wrote:
>>
>> There’s been a rash of updates to v5.1.14 in the last 10 days, making it 
>> a good time to have a look at the prerelease at 
>> http://tiddlywiki.com/prerelease
>>
>> I’d like to highlight the new QR code generator plugin (installed in the 
>> prerelease so that you can try it out easily). I had little idea about QR 
>> codes before the recent correspondence here on the mailing list, but am now 
>> a convert. If you don’t have a QR code reader on your smartphone I’d highly 
>> recommend installing one to play with the prerelease.
>>
>> Basically, QR codes can be used to transfer any block of text that isn’t 
>> too long/complicated to fit. There are conventions for passing URLs, 
>> contact information, wifi details etc., but there is complete freedom; one 
>> can make a QR code of JSON if you want (actually a bad idea as the special 
>> characters appear to compress badly).
>>
>> The QR code plugin adds a generic macro for generating a QR code from a 
>> string, and also adds a couple of pre-built ways to use it:
>>
>> * A new view toolbar button that displays the current tiddler as a QR 
>> code. You can choose from the URL of the tiddler, the raw text, or the 
>> rendered text
>> * Example forms for generating QR codes for contacts, wifi and generic 
>> codes
>>
>> Once I’d found the library, getting the plugin up and running was 
>> surprisingly easy — I had the first operational version within 30 minutes 
>> of starting work. A good illustration of the excellent returns on the 
>> effort involved in integrating existing JavaScript components.
>>
>> There’s a full list of changes in the release note, but I’d highlight the 
>> following bigger changes:
>>
>> * Extended search mechanism to require the search string to be a minimum 
>> length
>> * New Hebrew translation, and preliminary support for RTL languages
>> * Improved access to plugin information:
>> ** New “Plugins” tab in the “More” sidebar tab, listing all installed 
>> plugins
>> ** Better display of plugin tiddlers themselves, duplicating the gadget 
>> used in control panel
>> * Fixed height of preview pane to use a scrollbar when fixed height 
>> layout is selected
>> * Improved modals and notifications so that global macros are available
>> * Extended the SetWidget to allow a single result to be selected from a 
>> filtered result list
>> * Added new $:/info/url/* information tiddlers providing document 
>> location information
>> * Added several new filter operators for string encoding/decoding strings 
>> according to HTML encoding, URI encoding, regexp escaping and JavaScript 
>> string encoding
>> * Improved support for bulk loading tiddler files via tiddlywiki.files 
>> Files within TiddlyWikiFolders
>>
>> I’d like to get v5.1.14 released in the next couple of weeks, so any 
>> feedback/thoughts/questions are much appreciated at this point.
>>
>> As ever, thanks to everyone listed in the release note for their 
>> contributions to this release.
>>
>> Best wishes
>>
>> Jeremy.
>>
>>
>>
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