I think the layer thing works in very new versions of IE (newer than IE5 --
maybe starting with 5.5?). Back when I was looking at such things, the only
solution I could find for IE 5 was to hide the offending form elements when
the show menu function is fired. Kind of clunky, but that's exactly
To the best of my knowledge there is no workaround, it's a feature of
today's browsers. No amount of finagling z-indexes is going to help.
A viable option that Microsoft implemented was to hide (as in hide the
layer) the select boxes whenever a menu came in contact with one, then to
unhide it
I forgot...check out the instructors' websites at
http://staff.westlake.com/
There is a SL of DHTML stuff there.
Mark
-Original Message-
From: Galbreath, Mark
Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 10:46 AM
It's the opposite, John. The lower the z-index, the more foreground
preference the
?
- Original Message -
From: Galbreath, Mark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Struts Users Mailing List' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 9:45 AM
Subject: RE: DHTML Menus and Form Objects
It's the opposite, John. The lower the z-index, the more foreground
preference the object has. I
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