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Posted by Neredbojias on 08/13/07 21:31
Well bust mah britches and call me cheeky, on Mon, 13 Aug 2007 16:44:18
GMT Matt White scribed:
>> >> >> Basically, you have to style the html and body elements with
>> >> >> 100% height. This, of course, may alter the requirements of the
>> >> >> other markup.
>>
>> >> >> --
>> >> >> Neredbojias
>> >> >> Half lies are worth twice as much as whole lies.
>>
>> >> > Ok, tried that, but no change occurred. What am I doing wrong?
>> >> > Here's the link to the stylesheet:
>> >> >http://www.help-international.org/beta/css/global.css
>>
>> >> Well, a change did occur, but regardless.
>>
>> >> Now put overflow:auto; on #content. You should see a result and
>> >> probably be able to figure the rest out yourself.
>>
>> >> --
>> >> Neredbojias
>> >> Half lies are worth twice as much as whole lies.
>>
>> > This seems to have improved things except one new problem: there
>> > are two scrollbars now. One is for the whole page and one is for
>> > the right div only. How can I get rid of one or the other?
>>
>> You have to apply "overflow:hidden;" to html and perhaps body. It's
>> been a while since I did such things and don't have any of my old
>> samples left. It will work pretty good if you get the settings right,
>> but ie6 can still have some problems.
>>
>> --
>> Neredbojias
>> Half lies are worth twice as much as whole lies.
>
> Thanks Neredbojias. The solution I'm now using that works in IE and
> Firefox (haven't tested on older versions, however) is to set
> overflow: hidden on the html element and overflow: scroll on the
> content div. Looks beautiful... brings tears to my eyes.
Glad you got it worked out. I remember spending "hours 'n h-owers" on
that stuff, 'specially trying to get ie6 to cooperate. Now - eh, who
cares... <g>
--
Neredbojias
Half lies are worth twice as much as whole lies.
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