I see you said <tr> but surely you could include the <a href> inside
each <td> for that <tr> and achieve the same result.

/alex

On 2/22/07, Alex Ezell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I might not have read this right, so please explain more if I missed 
> something.
>
> If it goes to a new page, why not just use a link? Why any javascript?
>
> If the idea is to use the whole area of the <td> as the link, then
> just use CSS on the "a" selector to style the box model for the
> appropriate "a" tag to fill the <td>. Does that make sense?
>
> /alex
>
> On 2/22/07, Brian Ronk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > This is a little strange, but I want to do a non AJAX request.  I
> > thought it might be a synchronous request, instead of asynchronous,
> > but that didn't work.  This is what I tried:
> >
> > function compDetail(compid) {
> >    ajaxOptions = {
> >       async: false,
> >       type: "get",
> >       url: "compdetail.php",
> >       data: "compid=" + compid
> >    };
> >    $.ajax(ajaxOptions);
> > }
> >
> > I have this called from an onclick in a <tr> tag.  I want it to go to
> > a new page (compdetail.php), not just return the information.  Guess
> > I'm forgetting the meaning of a/synchronous.
> > One idea is to just wrap the <tr></tr> in <a href></a>, but I don't
> > think that would work the way I want it to.  Anyone know if this is
> > possible?
> >
> > --
> > Brian Ronk
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > jQuery mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > http://jquery.com/discuss/
> >
>

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