Title: Charlie's Replies | WordPress.org

---

# Charlie

  [  ](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/)

 *   [Profile](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/)
 *   [Topics Started](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/topics/)
 *   [Replies Created](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/replies/)
 *   [Reviews Written](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/reviews/)
 *   [Topics Replied To](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/replied-to/)
 *   [Engagements](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/engagements/)
 *   [Favorites](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/favorites/)

 Search replies:

## Forum Replies Created

Viewing 1 replies (of 1 total)

 *   Forum: [Themes and Templates](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/themes-and-templates/)
   
   In reply to: [[Edge] Child Theme problem – Responsive CSS](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/child-theme-problem-responsive-css/)
 *  [Charlie](https://wordpress.org/support/users/char10/)
 * (@char10)
 * [9 years, 3 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/child-theme-problem-responsive-css/#post-8736461)
 * Hi, I just encountered a similar problem. If I understand your problem, you want
   your edge child to have its own responsive.css, right? If that’s what you’re 
   looking for, then first under your Edge Theme Options in wordpress, turn off 
   responsive. This will prevent the parent responsive.css from autoloading. Then
   in your child’s functions.php put:
 *     ```
       function edge_enqueue_styles() {
       wp_enqueue_style( 'parent-theme', trailingslashit( get_template_directory_uri() ).'style.css');
       wp_enqueue_style('edge-responsive', get_template_directory_uri().'/css/responsive.css');
       }
       ```
   

Viewing 1 replies (of 1 total)