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However, IE being the default broswer that a lot use, I would like the transparacy to work well in it, I use google analytics and more people view my current site in IE than in other browsers, and if the text doesn't look smooth and normal on it, its not really going to help much, its not so much important that the website doesn't look 100% in other browsers as I can say this on my home page.
In the end we're all just the same
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All I can say mate, is good luck.
IE is a bitch to design for. End of story.
Until IE9 is mainstream, IE is going to be the most hated browser for web designers. Trust me, not-so-smooth text seriously is the least of your worries. People aren't going to immediately leave because of it.
Posted from SPARTA!!!!!!!!!! 2.0.
Don't forget to rate my post if it helped!
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Thanks, your right. I'll see what I can do, I know IE is annoying. Its just that the tex seems harder to read this way and if people find the text a bit hard to read, they won't stay long. I'll see what I can do.
In the end we're all just the same
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I already use a reset CSS, but thanks
In the end we're all just the same
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hi!
my question is:
i have taken two hindi e-paper. in first e-paper i have no problem to read it.
but in 2nd e-paper the font is unable to read. the look like other character.
can anyone say why?
is this problem of unicode.
thanx
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Are you developing the pages or reading someone's page?
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how to use jquery to be like this?? this is a city selector.,it is use jquery to be. but i want to know how to come true??
who can help me? thank u of before!!.
foe me a example or source code!!!
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Absolutely no idea what you are asking: your question (if that's what it is) is incomprehensible.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
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Looking into building a website that provides options for the user to change the countertop by selecting the color and viewing the change in the sample room instantaneously, changing wall colors, etc.
What is a good tool there to use for this?
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I think you need to represent building in 3D and also the sample rooms.
And as user selection change colors of the flooring or any wall of the room
dynamically.
You need to develop your application in Silverlight or WPF for best output,
and you also need to use 3D Image viewer[^] to show your image in 3D.
You need also color picker which is available easily. And then
according to the selection you need to apply generating image
based on color selection.
There isn't any ready made tool available for the same.
HTH
Jinal Desai - LIVE
Experience is mother of sage....
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It is where a bunch of twats spam a community page, like you, twat!
------------------------------------
I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
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A web development company that does not know what web development is.
Well that explains the need to spam the community. I guess you don't know that Google bombing doesn't work any more either!
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Please read this[^] guideline before you post anything in the thread.
If you want to put any product world wide then post the article in
"Product Showcase" section of code project.
Please do not market your product or Website in discussion forum.
HTH
Jinal Desai - LIVE
Experience is mother of sage....
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Hey everybody,
I am currently working on an embedded http server and I am serving HTML straight from my binary. Unfortunately I have spent too many years looking at NT internals and other extinct or near extinct programming languages and I am lost when I look into the eyes of CSS. (Pun intended.)
Is there a cross-browser CSS magic incantation to make a table row take up the remaining window space? In the old days... I thought you could just do: <TD height="100%"> but it looks like this is probably not standard.
What I want is three rows... first two are absolute... and third row consumes the remaining space. I was hoping to avoid javascript if possible.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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I've had mixed results using % dimensions with tables. It's always frustrating, to say the least, especially if you try to get consistent behavior across multiple browsers. If you have a target size for the viewing area, try enclosing the table in a div element of fixed height, then applying the table row height of 100%. It should fill the div element completely, even if the row contents are blank.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Roger Wright wrote: If you have a target size for the viewing area, try enclosing the table in a div element of fixed height, then applying the table row height of 100%. It should fill the div element completely, even if the row contents are blank.
Right but keep in mind that I am trying to duplicate the GUI of my C++ based application. I wanted the first two rows to be an absolute pixel height and the last row to be relative to whatever space remained. I am seeing *very* inconsistent behavior when using the <TD height="100%"> tag across browsers. In fact I can change the tag behavior in IE by changing the DOCTYPE declaration.
I am hoping that HTML5 will solve some of these inconsistencies. In fact I am beginning to think HTML5 may be the future of all GUI design... even within native applications. It took me many months to design the application GUI with the C++ language... I am utilizing all of the modern techniques.... including GDI+ and dozens of advanced customized window classes.
I have only been working on the web interface for three days. I have duplicated nearly all of the GUI of my C++ application. I'm talking about a x100 difference in development time here. Wow I want to develop all my future interfaces this quickly.
As of today the Windows NT kernel (win32k.sys) is internally tracking HWNDs and device contexts and various other GDIOBJ objects associated with a application window. I think it may be time for Microsoft to reconsider the design of the window subsystem. Working with pens, brushes, device contexts, raw bitmaps and handles is overly complicated and a hindrance to designing a modern native application interface.
I apologize for the rant, but serving HTML pages from my application has really got me thinking about the current state of Windows GUI design within native applications and I wanted to get it off my chest.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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I recently came across something similar but with divs rather than tables but I think the same applies.
What you need to do, is explicitly specify that the body (the document body) has 100% height, and if there are in containers within, they also must have relative 100%.
Here's an example:
<html>
<head></head>
<body style="height:100%;">
<div style="height:100%;"
<table style="height:100%;">
</table>
</div>
</body>
keep in mind, what I meant by relative 100% is as so:
<html>
<head></head>
<body style="height:100%;">
<div style="height:50%;">
</div>
<div style="height:50%;"
<table style="height:100%;">
</table>
</div>
</body>
If the post was helpful, please vote, eh!
Current activities:
Book: Devils by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Project: Hospital Automation, final stage
Learning: Image analysis, LINQ
Now and forever, defiant to the end.
What is Multiple Sclerosis[ ^]?
-- Modified Thursday, July 22, 2010 2:49 PM
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Mustafa,
Thanks for the advice. Although this is not exactly what I am looking for... it appears to be the only way to get a table row to consume the remaining window space with style sheets.
It is unfortunate that I need to use ALL relative heights in order to get this working. I wanted my HTML interface to look exactly like my application GUI. My application contains a CListCtrl with exactly five rows and contains bitmaps exactly 48x48 and another CListCtrl at the bottom of the GUI which consumes the remaining window space.
I am not sure who is in charge of creating these standard W3C specifications. But in my opinion not being able to have both absolute height and relative heights is a huge barrier. I was beginning to see huge potential for using HTML in native applications for the GUI.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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Use divs, not tables
<div style="background-color:gray;height:100%">
<div style="height:100px;background-color:red;"> First row </div>
<div style="height:100px;background-color:green"> Second row </div>
Final row
</div>
Looks like:
First row Second row
Final row
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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