> Sweet! Very nice :-) > > Do you know if it is possible to skin the Nabble message/thread > view too?
The Nabble threaded view only has limited space in the upper frame, so we designed the code to only apply the CSS stylesheet in both frames without adding skinned header/footer/navigation around the Nabble block. This helps to maximize the number of thread nodes shown in the upper frame. > ... > There wasn't a way that I saw and there isn't much to the interface. > Though it seems to mysteriously pick up parts of your css for fonts > and font colors on the message/thread view. Wouldn't mind figuring > out how it's doing that as I'd prefer a different font like on the > maven/nabble message view. > ... The font and color in the threaded view will be consistent with the rest of the site. But there will not be custom header/navigation/footer. By the way, I also noticed that the links in the skin header and navigation all seem to be wrong because they point to Nabble. Did you use the URL Absolutizer to absolutize the urls in the skin? The help article for skinning is here: http://www.nabble.com/help/Answer.jtp?id=21 or just let me know and I can try fix it. Let me know if you have any questions or suggestions. You can also post to the Nabble support forum and discuss there. Regards, Will L Nabble.com David Blevins wrote: > > > On Nov 4, 2006, at 11:16 AM, Jason Dillon wrote: > >> Sweet! Very nice :-) >> >> Do you know if it is possible to skin the Nabble message/thread >> view too? > > There wasn't a way that I saw and there isn't much to the interface. > Though it seems to mysteriously pick up parts of your css for fonts > and font colors on the message/thread view. Wouldn't mind figuring > out how it's doing that as I'd prefer a different font like on the > maven/nabble message view. > > -David > > >> --jason >> >> >> On Nov 3, 2006, at 6:57 PM, David Blevins wrote: >> >>> I took a break from coding today and setup the confluence space to >>> send out notifications on changes. Since there weren't too many >>> other projects, I went ahead and did that for them too :) >>> >>> Secondly, I beefed up the site template a bit so that it can have >>> a side-bar on the right we can use to direct people to the more >>> interesting areas of the website and focus people on some of the >>> key things we are doing. You can add a side-bar to the right of >>> any page by creating a new page in confluence called "${title} >>> Links", where $title is the page in which you'd like the side-bar >>> to appear. There's even the 'Recently Updated' section on the top >>> right like we had for a bit back when we were using confluenza. >>> So everyone who comes to the sight will know what's "fresh". >>> >>> Thirdly, I saw the cool stuff that Maven is doing with the free >>> Nabble service and thought, "wow that's really cool". So to took >>> a stab at configuring the Nabble setup for OpenEJB in a way that's >>> nice and organized and then slapped our look and feel on it. So >>> now people who browse the site can even post to the mailing list >>> or search our archives. >>> >>> Feel free to poke, twist, pull, spin, and/or tinker with any of >>> the above to add you personal touch. The more ideas the better! >>> >>> -David >>> >> > > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Confluence-and-Website-and-Nabble-updates-tf2572393s2756.html#a7180964 Sent from the OpenEJB Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
