This works well for me too (thanks!), but another problem arises: My table
doesn't fit on one page. If it is oriented at 0 deg. on a portrait-page, the
table continues, as wished, on the next page, repeating the header in the first
line.
Oriented by 90 deg., the table just gets written across the b
Thanks Pascal. That does the job nicely.
Jason
On 22 Jun 2006, at 12:09, Pascal Sancho wrote:
Depending on referecence-orientation value, you should explicitely
give
either i-p-d (your case) or b-p-d, like in following snippet:
content
content
content
Thanks Rick. I'll bear your suggestion in mind for the future. At the
moment this would be difficult to do because of how I am generating
the XSL:FO.
Jason
On 22 Jun 2006, at 12:09, Rick Roen wrote:
Jason,
I have done this for tables that need either landscape or portrait
orientation bas
Jason,
I have done this for tables that need either landscape or portrait
orientation based on the width of the table.
I setup two simple-page-masters:
> -Original Message-
> From: Jason Cowley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, June 22, 2006 12:34 PM
>
> I am working on an application that dynamically generates
> XSL:FO xml, from XHTML forms to produce PDF output. On
> certain large tables within a document I would like to ch