In my opinion it is simply an omission in the CSS.
The Navbar has a fixed position which takes it out of the 'flow' of the
document.
One unfortunate side-effect is that it covers anchor tags which, by
default, are displayed at the top (under the bar!)
On Tuesday, July 31, 2012 5:34:50 PM UTC+1, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>
> would you say this is a bootstrap bug?
>
> On Tuesday, 31 July 2012 11:08:43 UTC-5, villas wrote:
>>
>> Hi Niphlod,
>>
>> Thanks for your comments. As you say, this problem can affect all
>> anchor tags, not just markmin ones. My solution therefore is a little
>> more specific than it needed to be.
>>
>> However, although you mention an 'ideal' solution, you do not describe
>> it sufficiently clearly for me to test it and see whether it is better.
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, July 31, 2012 4:33:42 PM UTC+1, Niphlod wrote:
>>>
>>> That is not a markmin problem.
>>> If you use the navbar there is a fixed padding-top margin on the body.
>>> Ideally you should insert a "void" first element or use the first
>>> section with the same padding-top.
>>>
>>>
>>> Il giorno martedì 31 luglio 2012 17:09:44 UTC+2, villas ha scritto:
>>>>
>>>> This solution took a while for me to find, so I am sharing it to
>>>> hopefully save time for others.
>>>>
>>>> Problem: The Bootstrap top navbar is great, but it conceals any
>>>> anchors in your markmin text set with [[myanchor]]
>>>>
>>>> Solution: Use this CSS style
>>>> /*move markmin anchor tags down*/
>>>> a[name^="markmin"] { position:relative; top:-50px; }
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Hmm, wonder whether this should be included in standard stylesheet?
>>>
>>>
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