|
Posted by jake on 07/07/05 18:19
In message <1120638906.451398.227640@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>, Alan
Wood <alan.wood@justis.com> writes
>
>jake wrote:
>
>> Let's see.
>>
>> I have a 3-frame presentation.
>>
>> Frame 1. A through Z
>> Frame 2. A list of all the chemicals starting with A, or B or whatever's
>> set by Frame 1.
>> Frame 3. details about the safety measures for the chemical set by Frame
>> 2.
>>
>>
>> I want details about Isobutanol.
>>
>> I click on 'I', then click on 'Isobutanol'.
>>
>> How much more simpler could it be? Clearly you see a problem where there
>> is no problem.
>>
>It is possible to have a framed site like this, and to enable a
>reasonably knowledgable user to bookmark the safety measures page for
>isobutanol.
>
>My chemical site uses some framed indexes, but has a "No frames" link
>on each data sheet. Click the link and you have a complete page that
>can be bookmarked in any browser that supports bookmarking.
>
><http://www.alanwood.net/pesticides/index_cn_frame.html>
>
>--
>Alan Wood
>http://www.alanwood.net (Unicode, special characters, pesticide names)
>
An excellent example of a framed site, and one that many people need to
take time out to study.
regards.
--
Jake
(jake@gododdin.demon.co.uk .... just a spam trap.)
[Back to original message]
|