agreed!
On Jan 29, 2007, at 5:52 PM, Jordan A. Fowler wrote:
Chris,
I was unaware of "in_groups_of" method, that's awesome!
-Jordan
On Jan 29, 2007, at 5:50 PM, Chris Abad wrote:
I'll get this out of the way first... this seems a bit extreme for
an IE workaround and you're probably better off reworking your
CSS. However, to answer your question, you can do this:
<% object.features.in_groups_of(4).each do |feature| %>
<ul class="css">
<% if feature %>
<li class="css-li">Feature <%= feature.id.to_s %></li>
<% end %>
</ul>
<% end %>
Couple things to note.
1. in_groups_of will pad the group w/ nil's where necessary.
2. This will split the section into groups for all browsers. You
can then handle your CSS using an IE filter and an IE-only
stylesheet.
On Jan 29, 2007, at 5:39 PM, Kevin Burk wrote:
Working around Microsoft's utter lack of support for web
standards, I'm faced with needing a code hack so that the CSS
that works in every other browser will display correctly in IE on
Windows.
The issue is with an iterated list: to make the code work in IE,
I have to limit each list to only 4 items. The challenge is that
I don't know how many items will be in a given list.
Normally, I would use this code:
<% object.features.each do |f| -%>
<ul class="css">
<li class="css-li"><%= f.name %></li>
</ul>
<% end %>
However, I now need to make sure that the output breaks the list
at 4 items and then starts a new list:
<ul class="css">
<li class="css-li">Feature 1</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 2</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 3</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 4</li>
</ul>
<ul class="css">
<li class="css-li">Feature 5</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 6</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 7</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 8</li>
</ul>
<ul class="css">
<li class="css-li">Feature 9</li>
<li class="css-li">Feature 10</li>
</ul>
This is the only way that IE 6 for Windows will display the list
correctly. I'd rather not go back the CSS drawing board and
attempt to find a list style that IE will not choke on-but I have
absolutely no idea of how I would go about coding this in ruby.
An object can have any number of features, from 2 or 3 up to 20
to 25. Since the list style creates button blocks, I would like
to avoid any empty blocks.
My first thought is that I'd have to pull all of the features
into an array, count the number of features, divide by 4 to get
the number of iteration blocks needed, and then generate all of
the block code from that (although I can just about figure out
how to create the array and count the items).
Is there a reasonably easy way to do this or should I give up and
just try to find a CSS hack instead? I'd love to simply refer IE
users to Firefox, but I don't think that would fly with my client.
Thanks in advance.
Kevin Burk
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