Weepy... I was kidding. You get square corners if you don't do anything. That's the default display. I was just messing around with you.
;) -----Original Message----- From: jquery-en@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of weepy Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2008 9:45 AM To: jQuery (English) Subject: [jQuery] Re: [ANNOUNCE] Cornerz - Bullet Proof Curved Corners using Canvas/VML > <div id="bla" style="position:relative;> > CONTENT........CONTENT > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > </div> Good point. The only reason i was doing this was because I wanted to pass the corners back as a return value. I'm not sure you can do with without a parent container. The problem with IE goes away if u change the width or height by 1px - not sure what is causing this ! >> If this had gradients and drop shadows Watch this space.... Regarding 'square' corners - do you mean 45 degrees ? On Jan 8, 2:14 pm, Olaf Bosch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > weepy schrieb: > > >> The IE works not perfect :( > > > What problems are you having specifically? I know there is a > > subpixel rendering problem. > > I make a Screen, I work > offline:http://olaf-bosch.de/bugs/jquery/cornerz.gif > > > The element itself holds the canvas or VML. It can be whatever you > > want - whether it's invalid xml or not. > > Yes i understand this fact. I say it does not need. ;) > > Give the parent element position:relative; and the cornerz working > true, > see: > > $('#bla').cornerz(); > > <div id="bla" style="position:relative;> > CONTENT........CONTENT > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > </div> > > For what will you make this: > > <div id="bla" style="position:relative;> > CONTENT........CONTENT > <div style="display:inherite"> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > <CANVAS> > </div> > </div> > > I forget, thank you for this fine Plugin :) > > -- > Viele Grüße, Olaf > > ------------------------------- > [EMAIL PROTECTED]://olaf-bosch.dehttp://ohorn.infowww.akitafr > eund.de > -------------------------------