[-] raltsm4k@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Huh, are you running version 0.2 of the script? I pushed the sorting update not too long ago and I don't currently have it configured to auto-update. If you are up to date, would you mind telling me your browser and which monkey extension you're using?

[-] raltsm4k@kbin.social 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Made a script that does it, here's a link if anyone's interested: https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/469121-floating-subs-list
Note that it'll only work on screens wider than 1136px.

https://i.imgur.com/4skgYVk.png

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submitted 1 year ago by raltsm4k@kbin.social to c/tea@kbin.social

I've compiled a quick list here of reputable and generally well-regarded tea vendors. I can’t vouch for all of these personally but have done my best to research each thoroughly. The list is pretty brief at the moment but of course open to expansion. Feel free to leave a comment if you've had a positive experience with a vendor not on the list!

  • Yunnan Sourcing [China], [US] - Highly reputable vendor sourcing from the Yunnan province of China. Generally good-quality tea of all types, and a great starting point for beginners. US website will ship from their Texas warehouse but with somewhat reduced selection.
  • Teavivre [China], [US] - Another well-regarded tea vendor sourcing from a variety of regions in China. Also has a US warehouse.
  • Upton Tea [US] - US-based vendor that imports tea from all over the world. Particularly recommended for their Indian teas.
  • Teabox [India] - Another vendor with a great selection of Indian teas.
  • Ippodo Tea [US], [Japan] - Japan-based tea vendor with a large selection of Japanese teas like matcha, gyokuro, sencha, and more.
  • Hibiki-an [Japan] - Budget-friendly Japanese tea vendor. Fast and affordable shipping directly from Japan.
  • Republic of Tea [US] - Vendor with a large selection of teas in both loose and bagged form. Sources from various countries including China, India, and Japan. Can be found in many grocery stores.
  • Harney and Sons [US] - Another vendor with a huge variety of flavored and unflavored teas, though mainly recommended for their black and flavored teas. Offers both loose and bagged forms, and can also be found in many grocery stores.
  • Floating Leaves [US] - Very well-regarded specialty vendor specializing in Taiwanese oolong teas, also offering black, puer, green, and white.
  • Crimson Lotus [China/US] - Seattle-based vendor sourcing directly from Yunnan, China, specializing in puer tea. Ships mainly from China with some inventory at their Seattle warehouse.
  • white2tea [China] - Heavily puer-focused vendor with an expansive selection of raw and ripe puers. Also offers some higher-end black, oolong, and white teas.
[-] raltsm4k@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

The script adds toggles for both features under the settings area so you can just toggle off comment collapsing if you already have a script that does that.

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Welcome to /m/tea! (kbin.social)
submitted 1 year ago by raltsm4k@kbin.social to c/tea@kbin.social

I created this magazine as a space for all tea lovers, as well as those new to the hobby, to discuss anything they wish about the drink, from growing to preparation to consumption. Whether you want to spread the word about a favorite vendor or grower of yours, post a picture of your tea stash, or just share what you're drinking today, all are welcome!

Thanks for stopping by, and I look forward to making this magazine the best it can be.

[-] raltsm4k@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Not sure about JS, but from some cursory experimentation there don't seem to be any limitations on what can be done with the custom CSS. It seems to just load whatever CSS code you put there into a style block at the top of the finalized page source, so anything goes really. I wouldn't be surprised to see limitations on this in the future since this could obviously lead to some annoyances from making the entire page invisible to overlaying a seizure gif onto everything.

As far as documentation I don't know of anything official, but /m/kbinStyles seems like your best bet for asking questions, alongside using inspect element to identify the elements you want to style while consulting a CSS reference like w3schools. Also iirc, browser extensions like Stylus let you create custom themes for sites while previewing them on the fly which would be pretty helpful here. As long as you're not trying to do anything crazy complex you could probably learn what you need to style a magazine in an afternoon!

raltsm4k

joined 1 year ago