On Thu, 6 Oct 2005, David Suna wrote:
The actual case was somewhat more complicated. The code was part of a
javascript scroller that I had modified to generate the contents of the
scroller dynamically. So first there was javascript code that generated the
code and later a timer handler
The actual case was somewhat more complicated. The code was part of a
javascript scroller that I had modified to generate the contents of the
scroller dynamically. So first there was javascript code that generated
the code and later a timer handler checked the height of
the element to dete
Did you try the javascript in FF after waiting for the page to load and
display or was it run at startup ?
Peter
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the com
This may be somewhat off topic to Linux but since we are on the topic of
browser incompatibilities I thought I would share a recent Firefox / IE
javascript incompatibility that wasn't caught by any of the standards
checkers that I use. The specific instance was
text
the javascript
Quoting Uri Even-Chen, from the post of Tue, 04 Oct:
> >
> >The lesson is - if you also want your Javascript code to work on many
> >browsers, try to adhere to the Javascript standard. Though it is possible
>
> I completely agree. But how do I know what is standard and what is not?
> Can you reco
On Tuesday, 4 בOctober 2005 23:17, Uri Even-Chen wrote:
> I completely agree. But how do I know what is standard and what is not?
> Can you recommend any website where I can learn the standard? I
> mostly learn software online and not from books. I don't even have a
> JavaScript book.
The stand
On Tue, Oct 04, 2005 at 11:17:09PM +0300, Uri Even-Chen wrote:
> Thanks for all your comments and suggestions. I will take them into
> account.
>
> Nadav Har'El wrote:
> >I don't know why this happened, but I'm glad it does. There's hardly
> >anything
> >more annoying on the web than Web-pages t
Thanks for all your comments and suggestions. I will take them into
account.
Nadav Har'El wrote:
I don't know why this happened, but I'm glad it does. There's hardly anything
more annoying on the web than Web-pages that insist to talk or play music
when you enter them. I hardly ever use the Int
On Tue, Oct 04, 2005 at 09:18:17AM +0300, Nadav Har'El wrote:
> I don't know why this happened, but I'm glad it does. There's hardly anything
> more annoying on the web than Web-pages that insist to talk or play music
> when you enter them. I hardly ever use the Internet when I'm completely alone.
On Tue, Oct 04, 2005, Uri Even-Chen wrote about "FireFox - not compatible with
IE":
> 1. Music - When you enter some of my pages, such as
> http://www.speedy.co.il/composer/ , with IE, you hear music
> automatically. When you enter with FireFox you don't (at least not on
On Tue, 4 Oct 2005, Uri Even-Chen wrote:
Hi people,
As a webmaster, I have a problem with FireFox not being compatible with
IE. A few years ago I stopped checking my website with any browser
other than IE - for economical reasons: most users use IE. Now I do
check my website occasionally wit
Hi people,
As a webmaster, I have a problem with FireFox not being compatible with
IE. A few years ago I stopped checking my website with any browser
other than IE - for economical reasons: most users use IE. Now I do
check my website occasionally with FireFox, but some things are just not
comp
12 matches
Mail list logo