On Thu, 2006-01-26 at 11:34 +0100, Andreas Hartmann wrote:
> Thorsten Scherler wrote:
> > El jue, 26-01-2006 a las 10:50 +0100, Andreas Hartmann escribió:
> >> Thorsten Scherler wrote:
> >>
> >> [...]
> >>
> >>> You mean the .lenya-table, but like stated above that can be prevented
> >>> by adding max-width.
> >> No, I meant the .lenya-tab, which is the <div> on the right hand side
> >> of the tabs.
> 
> [...]
> 
> > Limiting "lenya-table" to a max size will solve the problem because it is 
> > in "lenya-tab" 
> > and the root cause of the weird wrap.
> 
> Yes, but that would fix the problem only if the table is used.
> If there is no table inside the tab, it might still wrap,
> but actually I don't mind that since it only occurs on the
> server status tab at the moment.

Well, if you decrease the size of the browser window, it happens with
any of the tabs. So it also depends on the screen resolution.

Josias


> 
> > 
> >>> BTW wouldn't makes sense to integrate the sitetree as well into the
> >>> tabs?
> >> IMO this is not appropriate. You navigate the sitetree, the tabs contain
> >> the information for the selected item. If the sitetree was in the tabs,
> >> that would reverse the context (sub-navigation outside of main navigation).
> >>
> > 
> > Hmm, I do not understand that last sentence, but anyway it is personal
> > taste but I prefer to use my whole screen because I hardly will navigate
> > and seeing the information at the same time.
> 
> Ah, I think I misunderstood your suggestion. You want to use a dedicated
> tab for the sitetree? I wouldn't like that, since I often browse through
> the sitetree to examine document properties.
> 
> -- Andreas
> 
> 
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