Hmm. That should work. Bit confused as to what's interfering with it without taking a more direct look at it.No only one template
Hmm. That should work. Bit confused as to what's interfering with it without taking a more direct look at it.No only one template
Hmm. That should work. Bit confused as to what's interfering with it without taking a more direct look at it.
If you want to setup a temporary admin account and DM me the details, go for it, I'll take a look and see if I can figure it out.Yeah, I'm not sure what is interfering with it as I have now mods installed. You may have to look more directly at it.
PM sentIf you want to setup a temporary admin account and DM me the details, go for it, I'll take a look and see if I can figure it out.
Ok, in digging through things I can see that we can gain some level of control by modifying .float_left.logo, but it seems like the logo in question is different, it's got a solid white background and only a height of 99px, so it's technically displaying correct on the forum at the moment, at least in accordance with how the logo is apparently saved.
Well it's displaying the image that is being called to display, which is that image as it stands, with the white background.It shouldn't have a solid white background; it is supposed to be transparent. at least it does on my computer. If is technically displaying correct on the forum at the moment, then why does it look the way it does?
I want the logo to look correctWell it's displaying the image that is being called to display, which is that image as it stands, with the white background.
I want the logo to look correct
Still looks the same as it did beforeI don't know anything about coding, but I can tell that you inserted a different logo file from what you originally showed in this thread. The original was 639x254 pixels and the one I see now is 401x99 pixels.
With that said, using that second logo means that the image will be squished, which is what you're showing in the OP image when you first asked for help and that's because the aspect ratio changed. In other words, converting 639x254 doesn't evenly convert to the other dimension.
I quickly asked ChatGPT about even proportional conversion so I didn't have to do the math and it should be 401x159 pixels.
Still looks the same as it did before
Switch to the Duende themeIt's back to the MyBB logo for the public to view.
Switch to the Duende theme
Okay, I switched and the image still says it's 401x99 which makes it squished. You changed it somehow from yesterday when you first posted about this issue.
#logo {
background: transparent;
padding: 15px 0;
width:401px;
height: 159px;
}
This is what is in global.css:
CSS:#logo { background: transparent; padding: 15px 0; width:401px; height: 159px; }
The actual image file changed size though, not the system changing it? Are you saying you're using that exact same image you have showing on page one of this thread and didn't make any adjustments to it besides the css? Because the css shouldn't have made it no longer transparent for one thing. That's what's confusing.
Attach files
it is the exact same image, and I resized the image to 401x159 pixels and edited the CSS, no other changed were made

I make a copy then resize the copy and I still have the original.When you make changes to your images in Gimp, do you just change the image or do you make a copy and alter the copy?
Do you still have the original untouched version of this?
View attachment 53883
I make a copy then resize the copy and I still have the original.
Yes, I'm certain that the copy of the resize has a transparent background. I didn't think it could change from transparent to white eitherOkay, that original looks good and there is a transparent background. You're certain that the copy of the resize has a transparent background too? I am not good with html, but I didn't think that it could change it from a transparent background to a white one? That's not my forte.
Since 2007, Forum Promotion has specialized in providing advertising solutions to webmasters looking to promote their communities. We pride ourselves in being the bridge that connects forum administrators, bloggers, and more.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.