Hm. So. I'm interested in creating a webpage that is like this. On the left side is a scrolling list of like "tabs" or "buttons". You click on one and it goes to its own like window. So, say... Tab 1 = Embedded Video Tab 2 = Contact Form Tab 3 = Random HTML Tab 4 = More HTML And so on...
So, if the user clicks on the tab it displays what's in that window. Make sense? How would I go about this?
user652649
01:09
@MatthewH what did you try?
user652649
window = popup ? frame ?
user652649
are you talking of a simple tabbox/tabpanels view?
Here's an example. This is in Silverlight. I kinda want something like this. http://prntscr.com/23s97l
And more or less. I am just looking at my options before I got looking how to do it. And I'm not sure what to search for. I've never done something like this
user652649
what you're asking is pretty simple, just some css and some javascript, so again, do you know css?
is there any known bug with sprites and fixed header? I'm getting a weird behavior on IE<10: When scrolling the logo will disappear and show only the height of the navbar, a few scrolls up and down sometimes show the whole logo, sometimes not
@crypticツ it has nothing to do with school imho, it's about how easy your life is. you improve your smartness with experience, even with the simpler ones. and she had no chances to have
<div id="Information" class="yuimenu CSOverThree yui-module yui-overlay visible" style="position: absolute; visibility: visible; z-index: 200; left: 1334px; top: 158px;"> put z-index in your element you have 1 put 100 or 200 and it s work
I want to track browser back button.
If the user click on the browser back button, It should ask user to logout in pop-up confirm box. If the user press "ok", user account should log out. If user press "cancel", user should stay on the same page.
I already visited:
Confirm browser back button e...
posted on November 13, 2013 by Extensible Web Manifesto Team
The Web has succeeded at interoperability and scale in a way that no other technology has before or since. Still, the Web remains far from “state of the art”, and it is being increasingly threatened by walled gardens. The Web platform often lags competitors in delivering new system and device capabilities to developers. Worse, it often hobbles new capabilities behind ei…
So to clarify, you are trying to tell me if my browser window was at 200px wide, it will 'load' jQuery twice as slow than if my browser window was at 1000px wide?
i have an android app that is intended to receive data from a server; the server is in GWT/java; something i dont understand about it is the entry point