You have 2 tables in your .html file that are pushing what you see on the
screen down.

You have a "panelContainer" placeholder table and a "resultContainer"
placeholder table.

The space is not due to your .css


On Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 1:20 PM, Russ <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thanks. I have Firebug installed but I'm not very familiar with how to
> navigate through it. Perhaps you'd like to take a peak? Here is the
> URL for the app. Notice the margin between the top of the table and
> the browser window:
>
> http://www.epcinternet.com:8080/StockQuotesIframe/Finance.html
>
>
>
>
> On Mar 5, 2:10 pm, Chris Lercher <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi Russ,
> >
> > I don't see a top margin in my application. I didn't even set anything
> > like this in my css (I'm using <inherits
> > name='com.google.gwt.user.theme.standard.Standard'/> in my .gwt.xml)
> >
> > Generally, tools like firebug are very nice when debugging CSS. Its
> > Layout panel makes it really easy to see, where the margin comes from,
> > and its Style panel can tell you, which CSS file is responsible for
> > the margin!
> >
> > Chris
> >
> > On Mar 5, 7:34 pm, Russ <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > > Thank you for the reply.
> >
> > > When creating a new GWT project in Eclipse, the wizard already creats
> > > a MYAPP.css and places it in the war (public) folder. It also adds a
> > > link in the html file to include MYAPP.css.
> >
> > > Will modifications to MYAPP.css file trump all others - namely the
> > > standard.css and standard_rtl.css? Will MYAPP.css relpace the other
> > > css files, or simply add to (cascade) them?
> >
> > > For some reason I still can't get that pesky top-margin down to zero.
> > > Even if I do this in MYAPP.css:
> >
> > > body {
> > >   margin-top:0px;
> > >   margin: 0px;
> > >   border: 0px;
> > >   padding: 0px;
> >
> > > }
> >
> > > Thanks again,
> > > -Russ
> >
> > > > It depends :) I don't know the specifics of your application, nor
> which
> > > > version of GWT you're using. There are many ways to reach your goal
> > > > using GWT. Here is one:
> >
> > > > Create a Public folder;
> > > > Put a file named MYAPP.css in that folder;
> > > > Modify your MYAPP.gwt.xml to call out that CSS or modify MYAPP.html
> to
> > > > load that css;
> > > > Compile your application. This step will copy the CSS to the same
> > > > directory as other compilation results;
> > > > Test your app to ensure that the CSS file loads (it will be empty,
> but
> > > > your server logs should show the request);
> >
> > > > Choose a widget whose style you want to override;
> > > > Find its class selector in the documentation or the source code;
> > > > Put that definition into MYAPP.css; modify it as appropriate.- Hide
> quoted text -
> >
> > > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > - Show quoted text -
>
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