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#1 |
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Hébergeur: |
Is it possibel to have DIV's inside a table cell so that their position can be
given relative to top left corner of the cell. Now the DIVs seem to position themselves relative to previous object. |
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#2 |
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Test wrote:
> Is it possibel to have DIV's inside a table cell so that their position can be > given relative to top left corner of the cell. Yes. > Now the DIVs seem to position > themselves relative to previous object. Without seeing your page it isn't possible for anyone to know what you should expect to see or what you need to do to change it. If the position of the cell is specified "relative" then a DIV inside it with position: absolute should be positioned relative to the cell's origin, and IE 7 does this, but on the other hand if the cell is styled with a border, the border disappears. Firefox, in contrast, positions the DIV relative to the viewport origin (assuming there are no containing blocks between the viewport and the cell; I didn't test any other case). If you nest the DIV inside another, relative positioned DIV, inside the cell, which now doesn't have to be relative positioned, then the positioning works in Firefox. So I think Firefox has a bug in this respect. |
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#3 |
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Hébergeur: |
Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removethis@comcast.net> wrote in
news:66ektnF2jvlqiU1@mid.individual.net: > Test wrote: >> Is it possibel to have DIV's inside a table cell so that their >> position can be given relative to top left corner of the cell. > > Yes. > >> Now the DIVs seem to position >> themselves relative to previous object. > > Without seeing your page it isn't possible for anyone to know what you > should expect to see or what you need to do to change it. > > If the position of the cell is specified "relative" then a DIV inside > it with position: absolute should be positioned relative to the cell's > origin, and IE 7 does this, but on the other hand if the cell is > styled with a border, the border disappears. Firefox, in contrast, > positions the DIV relative to the viewport origin (assuming there are > no containing blocks between the viewport and the cell; I didn't test > any other case). > > If you nest the DIV inside another, relative positioned DIV, inside > the cell, which now doesn't have to be relative positioned, then the > positioning works in Firefox. > > So I think Firefox has a bug in this respect. http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/visuren.h...opdef-position "The effect of 'position: relative on ... table-cell ... is undefined." All browsers are behaving correctly. If the effect is undefined they are free to do whatever they want. -- Richard Killing all threads involving google groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://improve-usenet.org |
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#4 |
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Hébergeur: |
rf wrote:
> Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removethis@comcast.net> wrote in > news:66ektnF2jvlqiU1@mid.individual.net: > >> Test wrote: >>> Is it possibel to have DIV's inside a table cell so that their >>> position can be given relative to top left corner of the cell. >> Yes. >> >>> Now the DIVs seem to position >>> themselves relative to previous object. >> Without seeing your page it isn't possible for anyone to know what you >> should expect to see or what you need to do to change it. >> >> If the position of the cell is specified "relative" then a DIV inside >> it with position: absolute should be positioned relative to the cell's >> origin, and IE 7 does this, but on the other hand if the cell is >> styled with a border, the border disappears. Firefox, in contrast, >> positions the DIV relative to the viewport origin (assuming there are >> no containing blocks between the viewport and the cell; I didn't test >> any other case). >> >> If you nest the DIV inside another, relative positioned DIV, inside >> the cell, which now doesn't have to be relative positioned, then the >> positioning works in Firefox. >> >> So I think Firefox has a bug in this respect. > > http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/visuren.h...opdef-position > > "The effect of 'position: relative on ... table-cell ... is undefined." > All browsers are behaving correctly. If the effect is undefined they are > free to do whatever they want. Ah, OK, thanks. I was concentrating on the section on absolute positioning and didn't bother to read the section on relative positioning. |
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#5 |
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Hébergeur: |
On 2008-04-14, Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removethis@comcast.net> wrote:
> rf wrote: >> Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removethis@comcast.net> wrote in >> news:66ektnF2jvlqiU1@mid.individual.net: >> >>> Test wrote: >>>> Is it possibel to have DIV's inside a table cell so that their >>>> position can be given relative to top left corner of the cell. >>> Yes. >>> >>>> Now the DIVs seem to position >>>> themselves relative to previous object. >>> Without seeing your page it isn't possible for anyone to know what you >>> should expect to see or what you need to do to change it. >>> >>> If the position of the cell is specified "relative" then a DIV inside >>> it with position: absolute should be positioned relative to the cell's >>> origin, and IE 7 does this, but on the other hand if the cell is >>> styled with a border, the border disappears. Firefox, in contrast, >>> positions the DIV relative to the viewport origin (assuming there are >>> no containing blocks between the viewport and the cell; I didn't test >>> any other case). >>> >>> If you nest the DIV inside another, relative positioned DIV, inside >>> the cell, which now doesn't have to be relative positioned, then the >>> positioning works in Firefox. >>> >>> So I think Firefox has a bug in this respect. >> >> http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/visuren.h...opdef-position >> >> "The effect of 'position: relative on ... table-cell ... is undefined." >> All browsers are behaving correctly. If the effect is undefined they are >> free to do whatever they want. > > Ah, OK, thanks. I was concentrating on the section on absolute > positioning and didn't bother to read the section on relative positioning. rf is right and I almost mentioned that, but I really do think this is a bit of a loophole. If it was intentional they would have said something about it in the section on containing block. All they mean IMO is that it's undefined when you start setting top, left etc. on relatively positioned table cells. After all everything else can be a containing block for positioned descendents, even inline boxes (and that's much madder than table-cells). |
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#6 |
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Hébergeur: |
On Apr 13, 4:27 pm, rf <r...@x.invalid> wrote:
> Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removet...@comcast.net> wrote innews:66ektnF2jvlqiU1@mid.individual.net: > > > > > Test wrote: > >> Is it possibel to have DIV's inside a table cell so that their > >> position can be given relative to top left corner of the cell. > > > Yes. > > >> Now the DIVs seem to position > >> themselves relative to previous object. > > > Without seeing your page it isn't possible for anyone to know what you > > should expect to see or what you need to do to change it. > > > If the position of the cell is specified "relative" then a DIV inside > > it with position: absolute should be positioned relative to the cell's > > origin, and IE 7 does this, but on the other hand if the cell is > > styled with a border, the border disappears. Firefox, in contrast, > > positions the DIV relative to the viewport origin (assuming there are > > no containing blocks between the viewport and the cell; I didn't test > > any other case). > > > If you nest the DIV inside another, relative positioned DIV, inside > > the cell, which now doesn't have to be relative positioned, then the > > positioning works in Firefox. > > > So I think Firefox has a bug in this respect. > > http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/visuren.h...opdef-position > > "The effect of 'position: relative on ... table-cell ... is undefined." > All browsers are behaving correctly. If the effect is undefined they are > free to do whatever they want. > > -- > Richard > Killing all threads involving google groups > The Usenet Improvement Project:http://improve-usenet.org Safari, IE, and Opera all locate a "position:absolute referenced <div>" (located inside a table-cell that is "position:relative") relative to the cell location. Only Firefox requires the addition of another position:relative <div> inside the cell to get the location correct. I view this with contempt. |
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