There's no way to prevent it - unless you subclass @Any.

I can provide some other thoughts though.

-) Technically speaking, every element in the DOM that outputs an ID
attribute has to be unique to be "compliant" as far as having javascript
operations work consistently in the browser.

-) If you are using CSS # style attributes to apply rules to more than one
element in a document with the same ID that probably isn't exactly the best
way to do it anyways. Use .<classname> CSS rules for these kinds of things
instead.

You're going to be fighting an uphill battle trying to do what you want as I
am trying to prevent exactly what you want as much as I possibly can. :)
When weighing in factors of importance like javascript vs CSS id selectors
that are technically not correct I have to go with option 1.

So, it's "by design". Use class="your class name" instead.

On 11/3/06, Bill Holloway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I have an @Any tag inside a @For loop.  I notice that the @Any tags
that are emitted have an automatically-generated id attribute.  Those
are blowing my CSS implementations -- unless I can ignore them in css
somehow.

Is there a way to suppress the emission of those id attributes to the
browser?

Thanks!
Bill

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--
Jesse Kuhnert
Tapestry/Dojo/(and a dash of TestNG), team member/developer

Open source based consulting work centered around
dojo/tapestry/tacos/hivemind. http://blog.opencomponentry.com

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