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author | Case Duckworth | 2015-03-14 11:33:26 -0700 |
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committer | Case Duckworth | 2015-03-14 11:33:26 -0700 |
commit | 5685e1dba9b485939c833ba86f4e5c2e5e34453b (patch) | |
tree | f61602ba63e905e9bc7033ad06e790e7356e4dc6 /wallpaper.html | |
parent | Move test suite into its own folder (diff) | |
download | autocento-5685e1dba9b485939c833ba86f4e5c2e5e34453b.tar.gz autocento-5685e1dba9b485939c833ba86f4e5c2e5e34453b.zip |
Mostly fix #11: Dedication/epigraph alignment
So the issue is solved in terms of how it looks, though it adds a gross extra div into every page and uses :only-child, which I don't think is super-supported. But it's the best I can do that I know of until we get to better flexbox support. Or you know, maybe later I can try doing some templating fixes-- injecting classes so that normally, .dedication is right-aligned but when an epigraph is present, change the class to .dedication-left or something. IDK. Either way is sort of ugly. :(
Diffstat (limited to 'wallpaper.html')
-rw-r--r-- | wallpaper.html | 6 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/wallpaper.html b/wallpaper.html index 6a3aa2e..c2a9c9e 100644 --- a/wallpaper.html +++ b/wallpaper.html | |||
@@ -34,8 +34,10 @@ | |||
34 | <h1 class="title">Wallpaper</h1> | 34 | <h1 class="title">Wallpaper</h1> |
35 | 35 | ||
36 | 36 | ||
37 | 37 | <div class="header-extra"> | |
38 | </header> | 38 | |
39 | </div> | ||
40 | </header> | ||
39 | 41 | ||
40 | 42 | ||
41 | <section class="content prose"><p>He didn’t go back into the shed for a long time. His hatchet was in there, and his axe. He didn’t want to face them. His papers, he decided, could wait in the top drawer for a while before being looked at again. The pain medication made him loopy. He couldn’t think as well as he was used to, which wasn’t well to begin with. Even saying his thoughts out loud, it was as though they were on the <a href="statements-frag.html">TV in the next room</a>. Someone was cheering. They had just won a car.</p> | 43 | <section class="content prose"><p>He didn’t go back into the shed for a long time. His hatchet was in there, and his axe. He didn’t want to face them. His papers, he decided, could wait in the top drawer for a while before being looked at again. The pain medication made him loopy. He couldn’t think as well as he was used to, which wasn’t well to begin with. Even saying his thoughts out loud, it was as though they were on the <a href="statements-frag.html">TV in the next room</a>. Someone was cheering. They had just won a car.</p> |