chore: resolve flagged Crowdin issues (#45442)

* chore: resolve bengali issues

* chore: resolve french issues

* chore: resolve hebrew issues

* chore: resolve persian issues

* chore: resolve portuguese brazilian issues

* chore: resolve russian issues

* chore: resolve spanish issues

* chore: resolve japanese issues
This commit is contained in:
Naomi Carrigan
2022-03-19 00:56:57 -07:00
committed by GitHub
parent 141932a69d
commit d781c63fdf
50 changed files with 108 additions and 110 deletions

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@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ Recall that setting a flex container as a row places the flex items side-by-side
There are several options for how to space the flex items along the line that is the main axis. One of the most commonly used is `justify-content: center;`, which aligns all the flex items to the center inside the flex container. Other options include:
<ul><li><code>flex-start</code>: aligns items to the start of the flex container. For a row, this pushes the items to the left of the container. For a column, this pushes the items to the top of the container. This is the default alignment if no <code>justify-content</code> is specified.</li><li><code>flex-end</code>: aligns items to the end of the flex container. For a row, this pushes the items to the right of the container. For a column, this pushes the items to the bottom of the container.</li><li><code>space-between</code>: aligns items to the center of the main axis, with extra space placed between the items. The first and last items are pushed to the very edge of the flex container. For example, in a row the first item is against the left side of the container, the last item is against the right side of the container, then the remaining space is distributed evenly among the other items.</li><li><code>space-around</code>: similar to <code>space-between</code> but the first and last items are not locked to the edges of the container, the space is distributed around all the items with a half space on either end of the flex container.</li><li><code>space-evenly</code>: Distributes space evenly between the flex items with a full space at either end of the flex container</li></ul>
<ul><li><code>flex-start</code>: aligns items to the start of the flex container. For a row, this pushes the items to the left of the container. For a column, this pushes the items to the top of the container. This is the default alignment if no <code>justify-content</code> is specified.</li><li><code>flex-end</code>: aligns items to the end of the flex container. For a row, this pushes the items to the right of the container. For a column, this pushes the items to the bottom of the container.</li><li><code>space-between</code>: aligns items to the center of the main axis, with extra space placed between the items. The first and last items are pushed to the very edge of the flex container. For example, in a row the first item is against the left side of the container, the last item is against the right side of the container, then the remaining space is distributed evenly among the other items.</li><li><code>space-around</code>: similar to <code>space-between</code> but the first and last items are not locked to the edges of the container, the space is distributed around all the items with a half space on either end of the flex container.</li><li><code>space-evenly</code>: Distributes space evenly between the flex items with a full space at either end of the flex container.</li></ul>
# --instructions--

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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ dashedName: use-the-flex-wrap-property-to-wrap-a-row-or-column
# --description--
CSS flexbox has a feature to split a flex item into multiple rows (or columns). By default, a flex container will fit all flex items together. For example, a row will all be on one line.
CSS flexbox has a feature to split a flex container into multiple rows (or columns). By default, a flex container will fit all flex items together. For example, a row will all be on one line.
However, using the `flex-wrap` property tells CSS to wrap items. This means extra items move into a new row or column. The break point of where the wrapping happens depends on the size of the items and the size of the container.