And "I don't have a stick blender" is not an excuse, because stick blenders are incredibly useful and everyone should have them.
I used to have a stick blender, but I got rid of it because it was a pain to clean, and the blades weren't sharp enough to blend anything I wanted to blend.
There's nothing to see now. I rolled back the changes. But if anyone here's comfortable with the debugger on their browser, could they tell me what styles they see applied to
% this?
You mean the page source?
It's enclosed in a blockquote tag. Which makes no sense, because it doesn't look like blockquote.
And the bits that are displaying correctly are enclosed in (cite).
Font geeks. I'm giving feedback on something that has chemical formulas with subscripts. So HFCxx where "x" is in subscript. OK so for some reason subscript means "x" is small but at on the same line as "HFC" rather than below it. Kinda HFCxx rather than the bottom of xx being below the HFC. Seems wrong to me, but maybe it is an acceptable variant.
In chrome I see neither cite nor block quote.
Both those look like normal text to me, Ginger.
this is a test using the caret
Worked for me. I'm on Firefox.
In page source, Ginger's "cite test" had no tag other than the paragraph tag.