I have a few PDF files that were converted to HTML. I fully understand that this isn't ideal, but that's not something I can change.
The issue is that it places content at very specific points which breaks mobile responsiveness.
A typical HTML will looks like this:
<div class="pc pc1 w0 h0">
<div class="t m0 x0 h2 y1 ff1 fs0 fc0 sc0 ls0 ws0">Text</div>
</div>
And the CSS file like this:
@media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0){
.sc_{-webkit-text-stroke:0px transparent;}
.sc0{-webkit-text-stroke:0.015em transparent;text-shadow:none;}
}
.ws0{word-spacing:0.000000px;}
.fc0{color:rgb(35,31,32);}
.fs0{font-size:168.000000px;}
.y0{bottom:781.000000px;}
.h0{height:841.889770px;}
.w0{width:595.275630px;}
.x0{left:34.000000px;}
}
Is it possible to somehow make it scale? I'd even be happy(-ier) if I could just apply a media query to reduce everything in size by 20%.
As it appears from the posted CSS, position: absolute
is used, so I can't see any other solution (yet) than using transform: scale()
(if not to rewrite the html of course)
By using media query it could look like this
.outer {
height: 500px;
width: 800px;
background: red;
transform-origin: 0 0;
}
@media screen and (max-width: 1000px) {
.outer {
transform: scale(0.9);
}
}
@media screen and (max-width: 900px) {
.outer {
transform: scale(0.8);
}
}
@media screen and (max-width: 800px) {
.outer {
transform: scale(0.7);
}
}
height: 400px;
width: 600px;
}
<div class="outer"></div>