It’s not really that I wish to insist, and I know double posting and
bumping is somewhat rude. But I realize how topics get easily lost in
such an active group, I had problems finding that myself.
I promise this is the last time I bump this.

The questions remain the same...

Thank you, and sorry about that.

On Oct 20, 5:22 pm, "M. L. Giannotta" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thank you very much for your messages and your attention.
> I'm sorry if I failed to make my point entirely clear, that's probably
> due to the lack of fluency in English, especially in this field.
> Anyhow, thank you a lot Björn for exactly catching what my point was.
> Here it is the test page:http://www.laviadelsuono.it/wip/cartest3.html
> The link you sent me does exactly the things I was looking for, and I
> could adopt it. However, I would like to stick to jQuery to mantain
> some kind of consistency throughout the website (is it just useless
> paranoia?).
>
> As for your other solution, it looks like the most clean to me,
> although I am not sure how to implement it — being so totally
> unlearned in JavaScript as I am.
> I tried to take advantage of the CodaSlider by Niall Doherty 
> (http://www.ndoherty.com/demos/coda-slider/1.1.1/) as you can see in the link
> I sent you, applying a totally unorthodox usage of that script as
> well. But I'm quite sure it was a foolish solution, both in terms of
> time, weight of the code and cleanness. Of course it doesn't work
> either, I suppose due to the fact that I had to divide the two set of
> tabs into different divs, while you are suggesting to make the same
> div scroll, right?
> I'm not sure how to do that; and, should I have to check manually when
> the content (in this case the tabs, of course) overflows? If that's
> the case, wouldn't it break if the user was to adjust the size of the
> text?
>
> I thank you by heart for your help, it comes in the right moment.
>
> M. L.
>
> On Oct 20, 2:30 pm, Björn Rixman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > If I understand you correctly, you'd like next/prev and paging of
> > pages as tabs, and underneath that, tabs for the content? One way to
> > approach it might be to implement two tab layers, but from a user
> > perspective something like this would probably be 
> > nicer:http://extjs.com/deploy/dev/examples/tabs/tabs-adv.html
>
> > Have no idea if someone's made similar functionality in jQuery, but in
> > theory:
> > setting a width on a tab container, and then, if content in tab
> > container overflows, show next/prev links and upon clicking them
> > scroll the set of tabs accordingly...
>
> > but I might be missing the point entirely?
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