Thanks Eric about the fadeIn() params that was careless of me but it
doesn't seem to have made a difference... :(
btw the div has no padding and ive tried resizing it down to 50px and
it still doesnt fit....

man i really hate IE sometimes...

On Sep 25, 12:43 am, Eric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does #produtos_contato have any padding added to it?  If so, IE could
> be calculating the width of the overall element as more than "350px",
> causing it to get bumped to the next line.
>
> On Sep 24, 5:05 pm, Alex Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > sorry i just took a look at the code and its a fadeIn() not a show()
> > but really it doesn't change anything.. here's the code:
>
> > $('#produtos_contato').css('width','350px');
> > $('#produtos_links').fadeIn(resize);
>
> > where resize() is a function that stretches the left menu panel as far
> > down or up as the content goes (completely unrelated to the divs in
> > the js)
>
> > in firefox, opera, etc it works ok but in IE "#produtos_contato"
> > doesn't seem to resize in time because its supposed to fit in
> > alongside the div that fades in but instead sits under it...
>
> > On Sep 24, 5:48 pm, ricardobeat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > There is no way a css() and show() could happen in the wrong order, as
> > > the second one only executes after the first one returns the object.
> > > Is it an animated resize?
>
> > > On Sep 24, 3:59 pm, Alex Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > yeah bud thats a given i just wanted to confirm that there wasn't a
> > > > callback and why not.
>
> > > > thanks for all the replies!
>
> > > > ajpiano wrote:
> > > > > that sounds like an issue that needs debugging, not a (superfluous)
> > > > > change to the library core...
>
> > > > > On Sep 24, 1:06 pm, Alex Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > > > i realize that... i just needed this in a rare case where jquery is
> > > > > > showing an element before resizing it, even though the resize
> > > > > > statement (css) is before the show()...
>
> > > > > > On Sep 23, 9:05 pm, ricardobeat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > > > > Yeah, it's just like doing
>
> > > > > > > $('color','red'); alert('color changed');
>
> > > > > > > On Sep 23, 5:15 pm, MorningZ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > > > > > Callbacks are used to know when asynchronous events are 
> > > > > > > > complete...
> > > > > > > > setting the css or class doesn't happen asynchronously

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