Greg Newman <g...@20seven.org> writes: > You're welcome.Fixed works too. Absolute can act goofy if the main body and > starting div aren't set to absolute. I should have known better. [1]
Fixed will not work in IE. It will scroll out of view if you scroll the page. See the bottom of org.css on how add the `absolute' positioning for IE only (the simple way...). [2] > Sebastion: divs work too on some browsers. Some browsers (cough) IE will > sometimes collapse them if they have no content. I've always had better > luck with a transparent image. Good, I heard that before. I guess it was IE 5 or something. Don't how the MAC version of IE is (crap I guess). It looks good and works (Linux FF 3 and Opera 10). Sebastian [1] Actually, the position is choosen relative (default) or absolute to the next parent, that has a non-default `position'. This works in all browsers. Example: <div style="position:relative;"> <!-- nothing special, but rules --> <div style="position:absolute; top:-10px; right:-10px"> <!-- close link and icon here --> </div> </div> It's important, to add _no_ padding and _no_ margin to the elements meant for positioning. Paddings and margins are handled differently. IE does it all wrong then. [2] This here might work (not sure if this works, if we position the img though. Maybe we'll have to position the link and use display:block;): * html a.logo-link { position: absolute; top: 0px; left: 0px; width: 190px; height: 190px; } _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode