


Once I edited this setting, the fonts on Eclipse went back to normal. I had also resized the fonts on the following location: Window > Preferences > General > Appearance > Colors and Fonts > Structured Text Editors > Structured Text Editor Text Font (overrides default: Text Font) > Edit I finally figured out what the problem was. No matter what I did on this setting, the font remained the same.

I went to the following location: Window > Preferences > General > Appearance > Colors and Fonts > Basic > Text Font > Edit Text Miningebased Hadoop Module (TMHM): This module analyzes the assembled unstructured data through text. So, when it came time to reset the fonts in Eclipse, I couldn't remember exactly what I did. (Alexander & Wang, 2017 Lee & Jeong, 2014). However, I had to go back and undo all the font resizing that I had previously done on every application. There are a couple of things that affect how you view a document when you open up Microsoft Word (or most other word processors, for that matter): the size of the type in the document itself, the view you’ve selected and the zoom you have set to make things larger or smaller. Guess what?! On the next Linux update, the fonts got back to normal. So, I went all over the place resizing the fonts for each application. Reference/More info: Compress or Uncompress Files and Folders in Windows 10. Two blue arrows is Windows 10's new way of showing the same thing, at the icon-level. A while ago I did a Linux update and it messed up the fonts on the entire system. The Intel RNUC11PAHI50000 is an Intel NUC Kit with an 11th generation Intel Core Processor and supports Windows 10, 64-bit operating system. Blue text in Explorer NTFS compression is enabled via the properties (this has been standard in Windows for many versions now). I have Eclipse installed in a Linux machine.
