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Posted by Chris Ianson on 03/26/06 01:22
"Els" <els.aNOSPAM@tiscali.nl> wrote in message
news:5nmh82o0db77.13rjnge62f251$.dlg@40tude.net...
> So, let's say someone has scrolled your page all the way till the
> actual image is in the top left corner of their window, and they press
> the link that sends them to the right. You're saying you don't want
> the page to be positioned so that the text above it is visible, but
> just that it stays put. Correct?
Well it would be nice for them to have the choice of where the page stays,
that's all.
> Looks like that's what Neredbojias accomplished using JavaScript.
Yes, and the idea is that the page will be positioned correctly with the
text/map/etc. at the top of the window (using another jump tag when taken to
that main page in the first place), so when they move within the panorama,
it will stay in the same place.
> Can't be done with HTML afaics, and by your initial request to be able
> to jump to an anchor in the main page at the same time as jumping to
> an anchor in the iframed page, I didn't think that's what you were
> after.
Ah I see. The anchor in the main page would have been above the panorama,
to keep the text/map/etc. in view at the top of the window.
You've achieved a similar thing with #4 example. Is that a layout table or
something similar? I'm just wondering if there's a way to format it a bit
and put padding, 3D borders, etc. as with normal tables?
If not I think JS may be the way to go.
Thanks again!
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