So what are the rules for stacking here? do the cells stack in the order in which they appear in the HTML?
Cell 7 is defined after cell 5 and therefore it "owns" that position? Thanks, Fady On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 4:18 PM, David Hyatt <hy...@apple.com> wrote: > On May 20, 2010, at 3:07 PM, David Hyatt wrote: > > If we could properly detect those degenerate cases, then you could probably > get away with binary search, but until we do that, I don't think you can. > > > Here's an example: > > <STYLE> TD:hover { color: green } </STYLE > <TABLE border="1"> <TR><TD>1 > <TD>2 <TD>3 <TR><TD>4 <TD rowspan="2">5 <TD>6 <TR><TD colspan="2">7 <TD>9 > </TABLE> > > In this example, cell 5 and cell 7 actually overlap and share a position in > the grid. You can see that hit testing works properly and gives cell 7 > precedence over cell 5 (e.g., if you're in overlapping background areas of > the cell, then cell 7 wins). > >
_______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list webkit-dev@lists.webkit.org http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev