From 48c73101e71234c22e9e7d88c3046ed8abaae6e9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Patrick Black Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2018 14:26:17 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Remove random 2 in docs readme (#2015) * Remove random 2 in docs readme * Fix #2012 --- docs/README.md | 4 +--- docs/documentation/elements/image.html | 2 +- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/README.md b/docs/README.md index ca1567ff..a8a872fc 100644 --- a/docs/README.md +++ b/docs/README.md @@ -16,6 +16,4 @@ Then to view the documentation in your local checkout: ``` jekyll serve --incremental --config _config.local.yml ``` -This will start an HTTP server at `http://localhost:4000/` that serves the docs built in the `_site` directory; and anytime the docs are rebuilt by you, it will serve the docs site on the fly. -2. In your main shell session where you develop, if you change anything in `docs/` the jekyll server will rebuild those on the fly. But if you change anything about the Bulma SASS or CSS, you need to do `npm run start-docs` to build the docs' CSS before you will see it in the browser. The process running `jekyll serve` will pick up the new CSS automatically. - +This will start an HTTP server at `http://localhost:4000/` that serves the docs built in the `_site` directory; and anytime the docs are rebuilt by you, it will serve the docs site on the fly. In your main shell session where you develop, if you change anything in `docs/` the jekyll server will rebuild those on the fly. But if you change anything about the Bulma SASS or CSS, you need to do `npm run start-docs` to build the docs' CSS before you will see it in the browser. The process running `jekyll serve` will pick up the new CSS automatically. diff --git a/docs/documentation/elements/image.html b/docs/documentation/elements/image.html index 973ff858..08b03fc2 100644 --- a/docs/documentation/elements/image.html +++ b/docs/documentation/elements/image.html @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ meta: {% include elements/anchor.html name="Responsive images with ratios" %}
-

If you don't know the exact dimensions but know the ratio instead, you can use one of the 16 ratio modifiers, which include [common aspect ratios in still photography](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspect_ratio_%28image%29#Still_photography):

+

If you don't know the exact dimensions but know the ratio instead, you can use one of the 16 ratio modifiers, which include common aspect ratios in still photography: