Thanks! You're better than Google seach. What if Google created a forum for every major and minor level of knowledge (down to some level). There would probably be no need for a semantic web. If you're willing to wait hours instead of milliseconds you get much better answers than a Google search. Google could have two buttons on their search page. The regular search and the "search human brains". If you chose search "human brains" your query would be categorized and sent to the appropriate forum for answering. Is there such a thing? There should be!
On Apr 14, 2:37 pm, Markw65 <[email protected]> wrote: > And finally :-) > > If you add #hack to the url, there's a hack in there that waits for > the .css to be loaded. Then the example works as intended... > > Mark > > On Apr 14, 2:29 pm, Markw65 <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Forgot to add... > > > You can see a very simple example of the bug > > here:http://maps.myosotissp.com/bugs/jsapi-css-bug.html > > > When you click "Create table", it creates a table, computes its size, > > and creates a div with a red border of the specified size. The first > > time you click it, you will see that the red border is much smaller > > than the actual table (because the css wasnt loaded when the size was > > computed). For subsequent clicks on the button, the red border will > > surround the table perfectly. > > > Mark > > > On Apr 14, 2:24 pm, Markw65 <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Are you dynamically loading the table package and creating the table > > > from the onload callback? > > > > If so there is a bug, where the callback fires before the css has > > > finished loading, and so when the table computes its size, it gets the > > > size wrong. I submitted a bug against the google loader a while back, > > > but nothing happened so far. > > > > Mark > > > > On Apr 14, 1:59 pm, larry <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Thanks. That helped a bit,but I still have the problem that the table > > > > is not spanning the full width of the div. But if I click on a column > > > > name then the column widths of the table adjust to span the full > > > > width of the div. How can I get the table to auotmatically span the > > > > full width of the div when it is first drawn. > > > > > On Apr 14, 10:48 am, p00kie <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > This is what you want: > > > > > > <div id="table_div" style="width:100%; height: 500px; > > > > > overflow:auto"></ > > > > > div> > > > > > > overflow:auto > > > > > > On Apr 14, 12:53 pm, larry <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > > I have a google table right-aligned inside a div that has the > > > > > > style=overflow:auto set. > > > > > > I do not specify a div width, but I do specify a div height. > > > > > > > I have a table whose columns do not span the full div width and the > > > > > > table has more rows than will fit into the div width. > > > > > > > When I draw the table the div gets a vertical scroll bar which isn't > > > > > > what I want because when I scroll up, the column names are scrolled > > > > > > up > > > > > > and are not visible. When I click on a column name the vertical > > > > > > scroll > > > > > > bar suddenly becomes associated with the table which is what I want > > > > > > because then the column names row is frozen and always visible when > > > > > > you scroll. > > > > > > > How can I make the vertical scroll bar be part of the table and not > > > > > > the div when it initially is drawn? --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google Visualization API" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/google-visualization-api?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
