Try adding the option positionFixed: false, like so: ....tablesorterPager({container: $("#pager"),positionFixed: false});
Here are the other defaults: this.defaults = { size: 10, offset: 0, page: 0, totalRows: 0, totalPages: 0, container: null, cssNext: '.next', cssPrev: '.prev', cssFirst: '.first', cssLast: '.last', cssPageDisplay: '.pagedisplay', cssPageSize: '.pagesize', seperator: "/", positionFixed: true, appender: this.appender }; On Aug 20, 7:05 pm, ptepper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In the Tablesorter Pager plugin, on line 25, the position of the pager > UI container is always set to absolute. In some cases, you want it to > be positioned differently -- I embedded a table in a page with a lot > of other preexisting content, and the pager was placed on top of some > other elements. I removed the absolute position part myself, but it > shouldn't be set to absolute by default. > > On a related note, the documentation for the Pager is unclear. It's > not obvious that you have to create all the Pager elements yourself. > You have to look at the source code for the page to see how it's > working, and it's not clear that you're supposed to create all the > images and form elements yourself. There should be some instructions > stating that you need to copy this code, or something like it, to make > the pager work. Many jQuery plugins just require you to specify an Id > for a container, and add code like this automatically, and there's no > instructions telling you to download or create the images (the PNGs > here) and set all this up: > > <div id="pager" class="pager"> > <form> > <img src="../addons/pager/icons/first.png" > class="first"/> > <img src="../addons/pager/icons/prev.png" class="prev"/ > > <input type="text" class="pagedisplay"/> > <img src="../addons/pager/icons/next.png" class="next"/ > > <img src="../addons/pager/icons/last.png" class="last"/ > > <select class="pagesize"> > <option selected="selected" value="10">10</ > option> > > <option value="20">20</option> > <option value="30">30</option> > <option value="40">40</option> > </select> > </form> > </div> > > Otherwise, the plugin is great - works perfectly and is faster than > any other similar things I've tried in other Javascript frameworks.