Thanks for the reply Ron, But the way I've coded it means I am looping through the months of the year like this
2001 | 2002 | 2003 | J|F|M|A|M|J|J| |COLOR| -THE COLOR EXTENDS OVER A NUMBER OR MONTHS |SYMBOL|- THE SYMBOL ONLY NEEDS TO GO OVER ONE MONTH Because a certain number of cells may be empty I cannot see how this can be done without two different loops. Its not just a matter of putting the details into just one predicted cell in the table. -----Original Message----- From: Ronald West [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 27 May 2002 15:05 To: CF-Talk Subject: RE: Dynamic Layers Hi, Do you really need to use layers? If you dynamically generate the color of the td cell ("bgcolor" or better yet through css), you can just place an image inside the td as well. Unless you will have text in the td and want some "soft" image over the top of the text. -Ron -----Original Message----- From: Declan Maher [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, May 27, 2002 5:46 AM To: CF-Talk Subject: RE:Dynamic Layers I am attempting to build a dynamic scheduling system. At the moment I have a system based over time where a user can enter colours for a particular number of months to reflect when an action took place. So say you had spent 3 months doing a certain task you input the start date and end date, select the task and output this with an appropriate color over a timespan of say 4 years. What the client is now looking for is to add another layer on top of this with certain symbols. Say exam date or finish of term date. What I need to do, if possible is output a second layer on top of the existing table. What I am looking to do is use layers to put this top layer in the correct table cell. Can anybody help or point to any resources that could be of help? Thanks for any help Declan -----Original Message----- From: Bryan Love [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 27 May 2002 04:21 To: CF-Talk Subject: RE: Bytes to MB/GB conversion tag? <LOL> THANK YOU!!! -----Original Message----- From: Jochem van Dieten [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Sunday, May 26, 2002 1:51 PM To: CF-Talk Subject: Re: Bytes to MB/GB conversion tag? Neil Clark - =TMM= wrote: > 1 MB = 1024KB. You're wrong :) 1 MB = 1000 kB = 1000000 B 1 Mi = 1024 Ki = 1048576 B http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html Jochem ______________________________________________________________________ Signup for the Fusion Authority news alert and keep up with the latest news in ColdFusion and related topics. http://www.fusionauthority.com/signup.cfm FAQ: http://www.thenetprofits.co.uk/coldfusion/faq Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists

