Firebug is a great tool - but using OOPHM??? Is it ready? Imho it's
ten times easier just to click "Compile/Browse" in the hosted-mode-
browser and your page will be opened in Firefox if it's default
browser - if not you can just copy the link and open it in FF
manually.

hth

On 17 Apr., 06:36, Vitali Lovich <[email protected]> wrote:
> Please post your .gwt.xml file & your html file.
>
> On a side note, I really do urge you to use OOPHM & Firebug - it'll
> help you track down this bug 100x faster because you'll be able to see
> the CSS rules that are being applied to the element & which are
> override each other.  That'll let you see if your rules are even being
> included & if they, if they're being overriden by another rule.
>
> On a side note, try adding !important to your styles.
>
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 12:15 AM, hezjing <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Thanks, Vitali.
> > Back to the problem, theoretically it should works by modifying the CSS as
> > described in the DecoratorPanel Javadoc, right?
> > Did I miss anything here?
>
> > On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 12:05 PM, Vitali Lovich <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >> I would recommend trunk & OOPHM mode which lets you run in hosted mode
> >> with native firefox.
>
> >> If that's not an option, you can try:
>
> >> public static native Element[] getElementsByClassName(String name) /*--{
>
> >> if (document.getElementsByClassName == undefined) {
> >>        document.getElementsByClassName = function(className)
> >>        {
> >>                var hasClassName = new RegExp("(?:^|\\s)" + className +
> >> "(?:$|\\s)");
> >>                var allElements = document.getElementsByTagName("*");
> >>                var results = [];
>
> >>                var element;
> >>                for (var i = 0; (element = allElements[i]) != null; i++) {
> >>                        var elementClass = element.className;
> >>                        if (elementClass && elementClass.indexOf(className)
> >> != -1 &&
> >> hasClassName.test(elementClass))
> >>                                results.push(element);
> >>                }
>
> >>                return results;
> >>        }
> >> }
> >> return document.getElementsByClassName(name);
>
> >> }--*/;
>
> >> Element [] topLeft = getElementsByClassName("topLeft");
> >> assert topLeft != null;
>
> >> for (Element tl : topLeft) {
> >>  System.out.println("Found top left with background " +
> >> DOM.getStyleAttribute(tl, "background"));
> >> }
>
> >> rinse & repeat for the remaining corners.  Code not tested (just
> >> grabbed the native javascript from the web) so you're on your own if
> >> it doesn't work (at that point try gwtquery).
>
> >> On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 11:19 PM, hezjing <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >> > Hi Vitali
> >> > On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 11:05 AM, Vitali Lovich <[email protected]>
> >> > wrote:
>
> >> >> Have you used something like firebug to verify that the CSS on those
> >> >> elements is indeed correct?
>
> >> > I'm not using Firefox and Firebug.
> >> > I'm testing this in hosted mode, is there an alternative way to verify
> >> > if the CSS is correct?
>
> >> > --
>
> >> > Hez
>
> > --
>
> > Hez
>
>
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