I want to increase the font size of "Hello" except the other strings,and to make it display in the console by [System.out.println].How can I make it and see the bigger size "Hello" in the console of eclipse?[java]

The console (and, in general, strings in Java and other languages) deals with "plain text". Plain text has no notion of text size or formatting. You cannot do that. You can only change (globally, from the outside) the settings of the console program - among those settings there should be the (global) text size.


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The presence of whitespace in the DOM can cause layout problems and make manipulation of the content tree difficult in unexpected ways, depending on where it is located. This article explores when difficulties can occur, and looks at what can be done to mitigate resulting problems.

Whitespace is any string of text composed only of spaces, tabs or line breaks (to be precise, CRLF sequences, carriage returns or line feeds). These characters allow you to format your code in a way that will make it easily readable by yourself and other people. In fact, much of our source code is full of these whitespace characters, and we only tend to get rid of it in a production build step to reduce code download sizes.

This source code contains a couple of line feeds after the DOCTYPE and a bunch of space characters before, after, and inside the element, but the browser doesn't seem to care at all and just shows the words "Hello World!" as if these characters didn't exist at all:

Any whitespace characters that are outside of HTML elements in the original document are represented in the DOM. This is needed internally so that the editor can preserve formatting of documents. This means that:

Conserving whitespace characters in the DOM is useful in many ways, but there are certain places where this makes certain layouts more difficult to implement, and causes problems for developers who want to iterate through nodes in the DOM. We'll look at these, and some solutions, later on.

This is why people visiting the web page will see the phrase "Hello World!" nicely written at the top of the page, rather than a weirdly indented "Hello" followed but an even more weirdly indented "World!" on the line below that.

Note: Firefox DevTools have supported highlighting text nodes since version 52, making it easier to see exactly what nodes whitespace characters are contained within. Pure whitespace nodes are marked with a "whitespace" label.

Above we just looked at elements that contain inline elements, and inline formatting contexts. If an element contains at least one block element, then it instead establishes what is called a block formatting context.

Let's move on to look at a few issues that can arise due to whitespace, and what can be done about them. First of all, we'll look at what happens with spaces in between inline and inline-block elements. In fact, we saw this already in our very first example, when we described how whitespace is processed inside inline formatting contexts.

We said that there were rules to ignore most characters but that word-separating characters remain. When you're only dealing with block-level elements such as that only contain inline elements such as , , , etc., you don't normally care about this because the extra whitespace that does make it to the layout is helpful to separate the words in the sentence.

It gets more interesting however when you start using inline-block elements. These elements behave like inline elements on the outside, and blocks on the inside, and are often used to display more complex pieces of UI than just text, side-by-side on the same line, for example navigation menu items.

Because they are blocks, many people expect that they will behave as such, but really they don't. If there is formatting whitespace between adjacent inline elements, this will result in space in the layout, just like the spaces between words in text.

If you need to rely on inline-block, you could set the font-size of the list to 0. This only works if your blocks are not sized with ems (based on the font-size, so the block size would also end up being 0). rems would be a good choice here:

When trying to do DOM manipulation in JavaScript, you can also encounter problems because of whitespace nodes. For example, if you have a reference to a parent node and want to affect its first element child using Node.firstChild, if there is a rogue whitespace node just after the opening parent tag you will not get the result you are expecting. The text node would be selected instead of the element you want to affect.

As another example, if you have a certain subset of elements that you want to do something to based on whether they are empty (have no child nodes) or not, you could check whether each element is empty using something like Node.hasChildNodes(), but again, if any target elements contain text nodes, you could end up with false results.

The following code demonstrates the use of the functions above. It iterates over the children of an element (whose children are all elements) to find the one whose text is "This is the third paragraph", and then changes the class attribute and the contents of that paragraph.

This source code contains a couple of line feeds after the DOCTYPE and a bunch of space characters before, after, and inside the element, but the browser doesn't seem to care at all and just shows the words \"Hello World!\" as if these characters didn't exist at all:

This is why people visiting the web page will see the phrase \"Hello World!\" nicely written at the top of the page, rather than a weirdly indented \"Hello\" followed but an even more weirdly indented \"World!\" on the line below that.

Note: Firefox DevTools have supported highlighting text nodes since version 52, making it easier to see exactly what nodes whitespace characters are contained within. Pure whitespace nodes are marked with a \"whitespace\" label.

The following code demonstrates the use of the functions above. It iterates over the children of an element (whose children are all elements) to find the one whose text is \"This is the third paragraph\", and then changes the class attribute and the contents of that paragraph.

Our company has a specific font that we use for all of our communications (Rotis Sans Serif Std) and it's disappointing that we're not able to use this in constant contact. So many other things are able to be customized, but the preset fonts available will not work for us. 152ee80cbc

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