Hi Gabriela,
The problem is with your first xsl:when clause:
This test is true for any 'first' pages that are not index pages, and so it
never reaches the test further down.
Bob Stayton
Sagehill Enterprises
b...@sagehill.net
From: Gabriela Simonka
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2012 9:29 A
This was an oversight. The height property should also be converted to a CSS
style attribute just as width is. I'll fix that for the next release.
Bob Stayton
Sagehill Enterprises
b...@sagehill.net
From: Robert Nagle
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2012 8:56 PM
To: apps docbook
Subject: [docb
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On 12/13/2012 10:26 AM, Jirka Kosek wrote:
> So in some cases it can be quite straightforward, in some cases it
> would be very difficult.
Another difficulty is that you might also need/want to adjust column
widths.
Another approach would be to store
On 13.12.2012 16:44, Camille Bégnis wrote:
> I didn't find anything relevant about this topic, but I am facing this very
> same
> problem. A table from which I need to filter out columns...
> Did anyone solve this?
> I thought the profiling attribute could be set on the colspec, and then
> remo
Hello all,
I didn't find anything relevant about this topic, but I am facing
this very same problem. A table from which I need to filter out
columns...
Did anyone solve this?
I thought the profiling attribute could be set on the colspec, and
then removing the
In that HTML, the width is formatted like that because it's part of the CSS
style attribute, and CSS requires the "x: y;" format so that multiple things
can be specified at once. The height is an HTML attribute, not in CSS, so it
looks like all the other attributes.
Why is width in CSS and heig