RE: DHTML Menus and Form Objects

2002-03-06 Thread ltorrence
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

RE: DHTML Menus and Form Objects

2002-03-06 Thread Assenza, Chris
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

RE: DHTML Menus and Form Objects

2002-03-06 Thread Galbreath, Mark
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

Re: DHTML Menus and Form Objects

2002-03-06 Thread John M. Corro
? - 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