: [PHP] lookin for a Menuing System...
Miguel Cruz wrote:
Do it in JavaScript, it works and it's client side so it will be
faster.
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by
their
browsers
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] lookin for a Menuing System...
On 29 Apr 2002 at 14:05, Martin Towell wrote:
javascript should be easy enough to convert to php - thier language
constructs are basically the same.
Sure, but that doesn't mean it's appropriate. A menu system done in
php
On 29 Apr 2002 at 15:11, Dan wrote:
what I need is a menuing system..
Much like this JavaScript one... except I need it in PHP...
http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamicindex1/navigate1.htm
Umm, you want to have to reload a whole page just to expand a
navigation menu? Not real good use of
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, David Freeman wrote:
On 29 Apr 2002 at 15:11, Dan wrote:
what I need is a menuing system..
Much like this JavaScript one... except I need it in PHP...
http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamicindex1/navigate1.htm
Umm, you want to have to reload a whole page just to expand
: Miguel Cruz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, April 29, 2002 2:03 PM
To: David Freeman
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] lookin for a Menuing System...
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, David Freeman wrote:
On 29 Apr 2002 at 15:11, Dan wrote:
what I need is a menuing system..
Much like
At 3:11 PM +1200 29/4/02, Dan wrote:
what I need is a menuing system..
When link is clicked the sub-topics appear under the topic you just clicked
on..
PHPLIB contains a class that can do this. It's not as robust as the
rest of PHPLIB, but it should serve as a good starting point for your
On 29 Apr 2002 at 14:05, Martin Towell wrote:
javascript should be easy enough to convert to php - thier language
constructs are basically the same.
Sure, but that doesn't mean it's appropriate. A menu system done in
php will have the advantage of being, from the browsers point of
view,
On 28 Apr 2002 at 23:03, Miguel Cruz wrote:
Do it in JavaScript, it works and it's client side so it will be
faster.
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by their
browsers / hardware
On Monday 29 April 2002 11:11, Dan wrote:
I could do this myself but I don't want to waist time writing something
that I could have just asked for..
what I need is a menuing system..
When link is clicked the sub-topics appear under the topic you just clicked
on..
e.g. if you where to
Miguel Cruz wrote:
Do it in JavaScript, it works and it's client side so it will be
faster.
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by their
browsers / hardware / corporate policy), and
: [PHP] lookin for a Menuing System...
Miguel Cruz wrote:
Do it in JavaScript, it works and it's client side so it will be
faster.
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by their
browsers
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, michael kimsal wrote:
Miguel Cruz wrote:
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by their
browsers / hardware / corporate policy), and search engines certainly
won't
Miguel Cruz wrote:
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, michael kimsal wrote:
Miguel Cruz wrote:
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by their
browsers / hardware / corporate policy), and search
on 29/04/02 2:46 PM, michael kimsal ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Can someone point me to hardware that is still in active use that can't
handle javascript?
what about a text-to-speech system?? I also know that older pentiums
and macs REALLY chug to get through the 100's or 1000's of lines
On Monday 29 April 2002 12:46, michael kimsal wrote:
Miguel Cruz wrote:
Do it in JavaScript, it works and it's client side so it will be
faster.
But take care - using JavaScript for site navigation is tricky business.
Some people don't use it, some people can't use it (not supported by
Mark Charette wrote:
-Original Message-
From: michael kimsal [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Similarly, can someone point me to a company that specifically disables
javascript as 'corporate policy'?
Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler specifically disallow running of
JavaScript, Java, and
Konqueror is the only browser (that I've used) which supports per-site
javascript policy (deny, allow, disable pop-ups).
Actually, Opera support this too - one reason why I do a lot of my browsing
in Opera or Lynx, no pop-ups :)
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, Michael Kimsal wrote:
Miguel Cruz wrote:
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, michael kimsal wrote:
Can someone point me to hardware that is still in active use that
can't handle javascript?
Palm Pilot
Cell phones
Those don't generally support HTML either, but some WML or something
On Monday 29 April 2002 13:05, Martin Towell wrote:
Konqueror is the only browser (that I've used) which supports per-site
javascript policy (deny, allow, disable pop-ups).
Actually, Opera support this too - one reason why I do a lot of my browsing
in Opera or Lynx, no pop-ups :)
Is is in
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jason Wong) wrote:
Konqueror is the only browser (that I've used) which supports per-site
javascript policy (deny, allow, disable pop-ups).
iCab too. It allows suppression of various intrusive JS features on a
global and per-host basis.
At 12:46 AM -0400 29/4/02, michael kimsal wrote:
Similarly, can someone point me to a company that specifically disables
javascript as 'corporate policy'?
My company does this. It's the only way to surf without being inundated
with pop(up|over|under) windows. I've heard (unconfirmed) that a
On 29 Apr 2002 at 0:46, michael kimsal wrote:
Can someone point me to hardware that is still in active use that can't
handle javascript?
Hardware? No.
Similarly, can someone point me to a company that specifically disables
javascript as 'corporate policy'? Back in 96-97, the 'no
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