I am trying to fix CLS on my site. Lighthouse shows CLS issues but when I try to find CLS in the Performance tab, there is nothing there.
I heard that CLS won't appear in the Performance tab unless there are actual CLS issues, but in this case Lighthouse is clearly showing CLS but I cannot see anything in the Performance tab.
I am testing the following page: https://dystopianstories.com/writing-competitions-contests/
Any idea why CLS is not appearing in the Performance tab? Am I looking in the wrong place? Is it hidden Any help or advice would be appreciated! Thank you.
Lighthouse results
Performance tab
Where it should be visible
Related
This is more of a pet project, as I like to try my best to batch script whatever I feel like without using a 3rd party app. I understand it would be easier that way, but I want to just try this for the heck of it. I understand the basic issue might just be the way the shell executes explorer, as I know it was NOT intended to run like this.
I have a standard user account and a batch script:
#echo OFF
FOR /F "usebackq" %%i IN (`hostname`) DO SET COMPNAME=%%i
ECHO Computer %COMPNAME%
TASKKILL /F /IM explorer.exe
runas /user:"%COMPNAME%"\ADMIN "C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe"
Echo.
Echo Press Enter once you are finished
Pause
TASKKILL /F /IM explorer.exe
explorer.exe
Exit
Basically each computer's name is the hostname of the computer, so I created a variable to process that. Then I have it kill explorer, then run CMD as the admin account. (I can replace this with Explorer as well.) Then when CMD opens I type explorer.exe and it opens the admin account with full access. The script runs fine, no issues at all with the script. But in regards to the environment, there are 2 issues I am running into.
Windows 7 everything works fine, every program I open is ADMIN, even the start menu user profile title at the top right of the start menu says ADMIN, until I open Administrative tools, then every application I open from there uses the standard user, such as computer management. I assume explorer processes the command off of the local user environment which is why. I know I can just use compmgmt as an admin to solve that, but I want to know the specific reason why Explorer is swapping, is it as simple as the shell uses the local environment and that is just how it is?
On Windows 10, the script process successfully, but Explorer runs extremely slow. Every other program runs fine, cmd, compmgmt, regedit, Firefox, etc... But Explorer is slow, I'm talking 5 minutes to open the favorites window, and the start menu will not open at all. I checked process explorer and nothing takes it up, except the standard get resolution and other graphic handles. I assume it might be just the way this Shell operates.
Anyway, I understand this is not ideal, and that there are far easier ways to do it, and that Explorer.exe was never intended to be run like this. I just wanted to try for my own personal creativity. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
I find the Wolfram Workbench a nice environment for Mathematica development.
However, as I program in Mathematica, I need to navigate the Help System very often.
The Workbench provides a tooltip tool that shows a very basic help for the Mma functions (just the usage messages), and is not enough for my usual needs.
So: Is there a way to bring up and navigate the whole Mma Help System from inside the Workbench?
Alternative solutions are also welcome. Re-entering the function name in a notebook and pressing F1 is not :)
Found an answer here
By highlighting the function and pressing Ctrl+Shift+/ a Web Browser pops up and shows the appropriate Wolfram's help page on the Internet.
The question is still alive, as it should be better to show up the local Help System.
I've just been re-installing Workbench 2.0 on Mint Mfce 17.1 and have run into this problem.
Do you have a browser set for viewing help?
Wolfram Workbench, menu:Windows|Preferences, tree:General|Web Browser
I've got mine set to the output of "which firefox". Sadly, I cannot get this mechanism to honor -new-window as an option (nor -no-remote), so the contents from 127.0.0.1 always show up in some other already open Firefox window. Meh. Note that you need not list the %URL% as a parameter (unless one of the parameters you give also requires it); it will be appended to whatever you supply.
I have an internet shortcut on my desktop, with the contents looking like this:
[InternetShortcut]
URL=http://www.microsoft.com/isapi/redir.dll?prd=ie&pver=6&ar=IStart
Modified=D03458CE7738C801A2
I was wondering if there are any tweaks I can do to guarantee that the browser starts maximized after someone loads the link.
Thanks!
In short:You can't guarantee that the browser starts maximized from one special internet link. Either all or none internet links start maximized.
But: Someone had a similar problem than this.
Check this, if it helps you.
Edit: owhowho I've found something really dirty, I think you shouldn't use this, but... here it is. Replace your second line with the following:
URL=javascript:window.moveTo(0,0);window.resizeTo(screen.width,screen.height);window.location.href="http://www.microsoft.com/isapi/redir.dll?prd=ie&pver=6&ar=IStart";
It doesn't make the window really maximized, but makes the browserwindow the maximum height and width.
Rather than using a internet shortcut (.url), create a shortcut (.lnk) to internet explorer. (iexplore.exe) You can set the initial windows state in lnk file. (Right-click the icon and see properties.)
You can give an URL as an argument. The target would be something like
"%programfiles%\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe" http://reddit.com
This is okay when you are using this only in your computer. This is not a general solution. If you want to do this programatically, there are some windows API's related to creating a shortcut. You will also have to get an path of internet explorer from the registry, as it can vary. Some users might not have IE.
I think IE remembers how it was opened last time and then uses those settings.
You might find this info from Registry and use it, but I doubpt that it was implemented to get the values from startup arguments
You're jumping quite quickly to conclusions here. I don't think you can even guarantee that Internet Explorer will start at all; you will get whatever the user set as his default browser.
i think that it is a guarantee that the internet explorer will start unless the system is down. even if one gets the default window, from there it is very easy for you to set the browser to what you want.
How can I make the tootip/flyover of the tabs appear faster? There is too much reaction time, it takes ages to look through many of them.
I have most of the time 100 tabs open in Firefox (I am using the tab mix plus addon - "tmp").
To see what's in the different browser windows I do not activate them, but I just move the mouse over the tabs.
After some milliseconds a tooltip/flyover appears (a little box at the mouse pointer is drawn above everything below) and it contains information from the header of the web page that belongs to the tab. But there is a pause of some milliseconds before they are shown.
If there is not a specific about:config variable I would also be interested how to change firefox code (as I assume this is not built into tmp, I didn't find it in the options)
I do not use the tmp feature "select tab by pointing after xxx ms", which could probably interfere.
Thank You
Karl
It may not really be a system wide problem as some others are claiming. For my website, I noticed that tooltip delay in Firefox was much higher than in Chrome. So I researched a bit, and fortunately it's easy to fix.
Just open your about:config in Firefox, and right click, New->Integer value. Give this name to the preference:
ui.tooltipDelay
Give it the value you like, I've just set that to 100 and it works nice now (Their default value is 500).
Source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Preferences/Preference_reference/ui.tooltipDelay
The tooltip delay variable isn't in Firefox's about:config because it is a system-wide variable.
If you are using OS X you can change it using these commands in terminal:
// make the change global (applies to all apps)
defaults write -g NSInitialToolTipDelay -int 500
// just for firefox
defaults write org.mozilla.firefox NSInitialToolTipDelay -int 500
I don't know how this can be done under windows. (maybe a registry key or something
EDIT: I just found this / wikipedia. Maybe you can give it a try?
I believe that Tweak UI from Microsoft PowerToys has a setting to change this on Windows. Look for the download on the right of the page about halfway down.
I'm tired of being in the middle of typing something, having a pop-up with a question appear, and hitting enter before reading it... (it also happens with some windows that are not pop-ups)
Do you know if there's some setting I could touch for this not to happen?
It suppose to be a registry change that helps with this type of situations (mentioned in this Coding Horror post about the subject of "focus stealing"). I try it, it doesn't work with all popups but helps with some of them, causing the offending application to flash in the taskbar instead of gain focus.
Not that I know of. This has been a plague of Windows versions for quite some time.
Actually Windows XP tries to avoid that. Of course some programs found a way to circumvented that. Microsoft Powertoy TweakUI has a way to turn the option on again in case it was turned off. You could also edit the registry yourself using the following information.