Right you are. Thanks for the pointer. I thought the stylesheet was the default, but my technical half has been tinkering when I wasn't looking. I reset it to opac.css and the grey blocks have vanished! Thanks. On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 10:53 PM, Galen Charlton <gmc@esilibrary.com> wrote:
Hi,
Galen, this is the CSS to change the colours, But, the grey boxes are
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 2:39 PM, Elaine Bradtke <eb@efdss.org> wrote: there
even when I use the default Koha colour scheme.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B0ag4Jlx4aGmazByRmdSMzZBRFU/edit?usp=sharin...
The opac.css that ships with the the Bootstrap theme includes, around line 680, the following:
.label { background-color: transparent; color: inherit; display: inline;
The background-color here overrides a "background-color: #999999" for .label and .badge from bootstrap.min.css. It appears that the stock opac.css is not being presented in your test system, which accounts for why the grey backgrounds are showing up around the labels.
What is your opaclayoutstylesheet system preference set to? I suspect that it's set to something other than "opac.css".
Regards,
Galen -- Galen Charlton Manager of Implementation Equinox Software, Inc. / The Open Source Experts email: gmc@esilibrary.com direct: +1 770-709-5581 cell: +1 404-984-4366 skype: gmcharlt web: http://www.esilibrary.com/ Supporting Koha and Evergreen: http://koha-community.org & http://evergreen-ils.org
-- Elaine Bradtke Data Wrangler VWML English Folk Dance and Song Society | http://www.efdss.org Cecil Sharp House, 2 Regent's Park Road, London NW1 7AY Tel +44 (0) 20 7485 2206 (This number is for the English Folk Dance and Song Society in London, England. If you wish to phone me personally, send an e-mail first. I work off site) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Registered Company No. 297142 Charity Registered in England and Wales No. 305999 --------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Writing about music is like dancing about architecture" --Elvis Costello (Musician magazine No. 60 (October 1983), p. 52)