PDF-Basics is a service provided by PDFzone.com | http://www.pdfzone.com/ __________________________________________________________________
The alert box dimensions and appearance are provided by the operating system, and we have absolutely no control over that. And the message will be displayed differently from operating system to operating system.
What you can do, if it is _really, really_ bothering you, is to create an overlay over the document and recreate this alert-functionality the way you like it as Acrobat form fields. This would give you the visual control, as well as the "hooks" for the way you want to have the user's answers to it processed.
Hope, this can help.
Max Wyss PRODOK Engineering Low Paper workflows, Smart documents, PDF forms CH-8906 Bonstetten, Switzerland
Fax: +41 1 700 20 37 or +1 815 425 6566 e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.prodok.com
[ Building Bridges for Information ]
______________________
Shameless Plug:
My next conference appearances and workshops:
* PDFConference 2003 in Anaheim, CA, November 9 to 13, 2003 (http://www.pdfconference.com)
* And, as always, available for on-site workshops/tutorials/consulting.
_________________________
I use an alert box in a form to display a message, but the box itself is twice the size it needs to be (the text occupies only about the top half of the box). I'd like to get rid of as much of the unused space as I can. I've looked through several books, and tried searching several online sources with no luck. Any suggestions? The actual javascipt (somewhat edited) reads as below. I use the \u000D entries to skip lines.
To change your subscription: http://www.pdfzone.com/discussions/lists-pdfbasics.html
