Originally Posted by
Dave Humphries
Is it me, or is there a possibility that it is slightly squashed horizontally? (or conversely; stretched vertically)
There are a couple of things that look (to me) a bit too tall/thin; namely the statue over on the LHS and the clock face on the tower of the parliament building, but having said that, I could believe it true of the entire image.
Hi Andre,
Thanks for the PM, further to my reply to you, I have now done some investigation.
Your original file is 15682 x 4335 pixels, giving an Aspect Ratio (AR) of 3.6:1.
It seems that somewhere, presumably in the html5? the code that displays images on the forum, which I believe is written by vBulletin, not us, that there's a Max Size limit on images of 9999 pixels. This only affects our experience in the following circumstances;
a) we view the image in the LyteBox feature and
b) we click the box icon (or hit "F" on keyboard) to expand it to 'Full size'
It then expands beyond our screen size and allows us to pan around with a mouse (click and drag) to examine the fine detail
The aspect ratio distortion would appear to be browser dependent:
Internet Explorer 11 and FireFox (52.0) both seem to limit the width to 9999 pixels, but leave the height unaltered at 4335, giving an AR of 2.3:1
Chrome and Edge however, both seem to scale the images, reducing both height and width to preserve the original Aspect Ratio.
So that's interesting, since the problem seems to be something the browser should fix.
FireFox especially, but I doubt Microsoft will fix IE11 as they'd like us all to use Edge anyway.
That said, if the forum (or LyteBox?) code didn't have the Max Size limited to 9999, it also wouldn't be a problem.
Ditto if you hadn't produced such a large image. I'm kidding, although it is a fact
HTH, Dave
I'll draw this to the attention of the CiC site owner, as much so he understands what happens in extreme cases, but personally, I'm not expecting a fix; given that happens so rarely and that it's another of those things beyond his direct control; reliant on him persuading other bodies to fix things.