Martin Heiden wrote:
Gaspar,
You can send the pdf with a custom mime-type like x-application/x-pdf.
Or a generic standard one like
AddType application/octet-stream pdf
in your httpd.conf or .htaccess
P
--
Patrick H. Lauke
__
re·dux (
On Aug 25, 2006, at 8:34 AM, Townson, Chris wrote:
now, as a designer, are you saying that you would rather your users
saw jaggy graphics which had been zoomed in opera, or smooth text
which had been resized in any browser at all.
It's not up to designers or developers to tell people whi
Joseph R. B. Taylor wrote:
. . . lot's of sensible stuff, as indeed do many others. My point about
Opera's zoom is mainly concerned with being able to make the graphics
expand at the same rate as the textual matter. This relationship has
always been a problem to me, as I find the text growing
Will try that, I'll keep in touch if that helps. You have a good
argument there. I only wanted to have the image as a % value where
the image grows and shrinks when resizing the window. But I will
change my stylesheet so only on IE the image will get a fixed width.
Thanx Kepler
On Aug 24,
> I want to extend an apology to the group, and to Felix to whom my ire was
> directed. I was a bit of a smart-[expletive] yesterday in my reply
> (re-posted below for the curious or concerned). I like to marry
> accessibility with usability with design, and in my opinion the latter
holds
> eq
I want to extend an apology to the group, and to Felix to whom my ire was
directed. I was a bit of a smart-[expletive] yesterday in my reply
(re-posted below for the curious or concerned). I like to marry
accessibility with usability with design, and in my opinion the latter holds
equal importa
If you have control over how the PDF is returned then you can add the
following header, or similar to (this one is in ASP):
Call Response.AddHeader( "Content-Disposition",
"attachment;filename=yourfile.pdf" )
-Original Message-
From: listdad@webstandardsgroup.org
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED
On 25 Aug 2006, at 14:21, Gaspar wrote:
Sow iam thiking of in a way of dont give the chance to user open the
PDF in browser instead of that compel the pdf to prompt "be download
or open width "choose program" ."
You can use the Content-disposition HTTP header:
Content-disposition: attachment
Gaspar,
on Friday, August 25, 2006 at 16:27 Matthew wrote:
> On 8/25/06, Gaspar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> And anyone knows a way of doing that, myme type?! httpconfig?! .htaccess ??
> I think you're out of luck - the configuration of what filetypes the
> browser can handle is specific to t
Hello everyone,
I try to find this in
http://www.mail-archive.com/listdad%40webstandardsgroup.org cause it
seems to me that i had already seen this discuss here but i dont find
nothing.
My doubt is, i got some brochures of products in PDF, some of then
have 500Kb or a little more. I have seen man
Hello everyone,
This is a text about IE7 css improvements. I think it can be usefull
for light reading.
http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2006/08/22/712830.aspx
Regards
--
Goran
mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
skype: gurugorg.net
***
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i already have made that a info box tell them to "save link as" or
"save target as" but i make some text with some old coleagues , about
50 years old, with a few experience in internet.
And like others with more experience they dont look to the box.
On 25/08/06, Matthew Pennell <[EMAIL PROTECTED
On 8/25/06, Gaspar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
And anyone knows a way of doing that, myme type?! httpconfig?! .htaccess ??
I think you're out of luck - the configuration of what filetypes the
browser can handle is specific to the end-user's machine, not
something you can control from a webpage
Guys,
This is another one of these conversations/arguments that really get
everyone fired up. I've now read a series of posts that are not much
more than little quarrels - everyone ignore Felix's stylesheets - its
really not worth it. Spend your time analyzing worthy sites' CSS. No
offense
> > ... you also cannot _resize_ text which is represented
> > using graphics.
>
> Unless you use opera, of course!
>
now, as a designer, are you saying that you would rather your users saw jaggy
graphics which had been zoomed in opera, or smooth text which had been resized
in any browser at
Hello everyone,
I try to find this in
http://www.mail-archive.com/listdad%40webstandardsgroup.org cause it
seems to me that i had already seen this discuss here but i dont find
nothing.
My doubt is, i got some brochures of products in PDF, some of then
have 500Kb or a little more. I have seen man
Townson, Chris wrote:
... you also cannot _resize_ text which is represented using graphics.
Unless you use opera, of course!
One of my bete noires is sites which break when the text is resized a couple of
"notches" up. I see this _so_ often, and it irks me.
Again, the zoom feature of Opera
> Townson, Chris
> > Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
> > If the generated image also has the right alt text, you can
> > copy paste
> > if you start just before the image (just as with sIFR). The
> > only thing
> > that you can't do is select just a set of characters/words from the
> > replaced head
> Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
> If the generated image also has the right alt text, you can
> copy paste
> if you start just before the image (just as with sIFR). The
> only thing
> that you can't do is select just a set of characters/words from the
> replaced heading itself
... you also cannot
I can confirm that this is a regression in Opera 9 and we will look
into fixing this. I'm not sure how high a priority it will be however.
David
On 25 Aug 2006, at 05:56, Geoff Pack wrote:
Just discovered using an escaped comment end hack in an inline style
will break in Opera 9 unless it
Mark Harris wrote:
imagine there's a heaven, I wonder if you can...
;-)
Sure I can! I use Opera - but I don't challenge that
inline-style-comment bug all that often.
PS Thunderbird spellchecks "Gunlaug" as "Onslaught" heheh
Your Thunderbird didn't do too bad, really. "Gunlaug" means "ded
On 25 Aug 2006, at 1:56 PM, Geoff Pack wrote:
Only seems to be an issue with inline styles.
Moral: always use a closing semi-colon.
Moral: don't use inline styles.
N
___
Omnivision. Websight.
http://www.omnivision.com.au/
**
Some text...
Or don't use any inline styles...
Jesus, this is a maintenance nightmare.
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Hi,
> I have just launched a new site; however, there seems to be a bug in IE on
> the PC on the following page.
>
> http://dineenandwestcott.com.au/about.php
You could use absolute positioning of the right column since it seems you
just want to get the right column past the navigation bar. Try
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
If they built a new browser from scratch then most of the bugs and
weaknesses might disappear all of a sudden, and all the fun would be
gone too. Just imagine what the web would look like then...
imagine there's a heaven, I wonder if you can...
;-)
PS Thunderbird spell
Hi, here is my justification of this seemingly off-topic post:
There was discussion about IE 7 beta and standalone version on this
list and people have suggested the standalone version; also, consider
IE browser is so important for our jobs, I am hoping my post doesn't
upset some people.
I
Saviour on a stick! Every time I think I've heard of the weirdest
thing, along comes Internet Exploder...
Yeah, isn't it fun? :-)
You know, the tech guys at Microsoft can't have a lot of fun with
this, bolting stuff on in order to make the pig fly. I wonder why
they haven't just built a new o
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