Thierry Koblentz wrote:
I think it was mentionned by Josh already (2nd post to this thread).
Doh...serves me right for only skimming over the thread rather than
reading it ;)
--
Patrick H. Lauke
__
re·dux (adj.): brought back; returned
Hi Helmut,
Justin suggested:
> 2) Use JavaScript to traverse the element containing the navigation to
> find the achor tags href attribute which matches the page which is
> currently being viewed (this would be done unobtrusively of course,
I don't know your particular situation, but in my case
Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
> Unless I'm missing something, I'm surprised that nobody mentioned
> what I thought was the most common way to do this with static content:
I think it was mentionned by Josh already (2nd post to this thread).
Thierry | www.TJKDesign.com
***
At 07:18 AM 1/14/2006, Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
assign an id or class to each navigation bar link, and also assign
an id or class to the body element. then, in your css, define rules
that match up the two.
...
home
portfolio
contact
...
...
...
body#home a#navhome { /* styling for acti
Unless I'm missing something, I'm surprised that nobody mentioned what I
thought was the most common way to do this with static content:
assign an id or class to each navigation bar link, and also assign an id
or class to the body element. then, in your css, define rules that match
up the two.
On Sat, 14 Jan 2006 09:16 am, Justin Carter wrote:
> Hope that helps. Maybe someone else can suggest another idea...
Well, i use m4 macros - each (static) page on the site is generated from an m4
source file, which (via an include) contains a macro to only generate items
in the nav menu which /
arter
Sent: Friday, January 13, 2006 4:17 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Active Links
On 1/14/06, Helmut Granda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the tips, unfortunately no Server Side technology can be used,
> just static HTML files.
If the pages must be sta
On 1/14/06, Helmut Granda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the tips, unfortunately no Server Side technology can be used,
> just static HTML files.
If the pages must be static then you only have two options that I can
think of...
1) Use a "current" class (or id) on the navigation element t
@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: RE: [WSG] Active Links
Helmut Granda said:
> What I am trying to achieve is this:
> http://www.alistapart.com/articles/keepingcurrent/
> but without using an ID or a class.
What server side language do you have support for? Creating navigation
like the php ex
Helmut Granda said:
> What I am trying to achieve is this:
> http://www.alistapart.com/articles/keepingcurrent/
> but without using an ID or a class.
What server side language do you have support for? Creating navigation
like the php example and including it with your pages is the best way to
ach
Hello Everyone,
Thanks everyone for your responses, I
think I explained myself wrong:
What I am trying to achieve is this:
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/keepingcurrent/
but without using an ID or a class.
I have been looking around and so far no
luck, I believe that
Hello Helmut,
On 12 Jan 2006 at 14:56, Helmut Granda wrote:
> So far the only way I know how to do it is by hand-coding it
> link.html
> What I was thinking about doing was to set up the a:Active class to > like
> bold or something, now the only time when the text shows bold is when I
> press o
The :active pseudo-class is used on the, well, current active element.
In any browser other than IE this doesn't even need to be an anchor:
you could (probably, haven't tested just now) use it on a form element
so that the background changed colour when you were entering
information into an input e
Helmut Granda said:
> Hello,
>
>
>
> I am trying to show on a left menu what page is currently active with CSS.
> So far the only way I know how to do it is by hand-coding it
>
>
>
> link.html
>
>
>
> What I was thinking about doing was to set up the a:Active class to like
> bold or something, now
14 matches
Mail list logo