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#1 |
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Hébergeur: |
Hi at all
I'ld want to hide a tag during display on screen and I want to show the tag when I print the page. I try: <td style="display:none"> or <div style="display:none"> <td></div> but the <td> is always displayed and it work also on screen How can I do please? Best regards and thank you in advance |
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#2 |
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On Sat, 08 Mar 2008 09:08:25 GMT, "Paolo" <Paolop@nospam.com> wrote:
>I'ld want to hide a tag during display on screen and I want to show the tag >when I print the page. >How can I do please? Use the classes "print-only" and "no-print" in your HTML and place this CSS in a stylesheet ..print-only{ display: none; visibility: hidden; } @media print { .no-print { display: none; visibility: hidden; } /* Simple standards-based way to turn printing on */ .print-only { display: inherit; visibility: visible; } /* IE hack, because it doesn't support display: inherit; */ *.print-only { display: block; } tt.print-only, i.print-only, b.print-only, big.print-only, small.print-only, em.print-only, strong.print-only, dfn.print-only, code.print-only, samp.print-only, kbd.print-only, var.print-only, cite.print-only, abbr.print-only, acronym.print-only, a.print-only, img.print-only, object.print-only, br.print-only, map.print-only, q.print-only, sub.print-only, sup.print-only, span.print-only, bdo.print-only, input.print-only, select.print-only, textarea.print-only, label.print-only, button.print-only { display: inline; } img.print-only, button.print-only, textarea.print-only, input.print-only, select.print-only { display: inline-block; } li.print-only { display: list-item } table.print-only { display: table; } tr.print-only { display: table-row; } thead.print-only { display: table-header-group; } tbody.print-only { display: table-row-group; } tfoot.print-only { display: table-footer-group; } col.print-only { display: table-column; } colgroup.print-only { display: table-column-group; } td, th.print-only { display: table-cell; } caption.print-only { display: table-caption; } } |
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#3 |
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Hébergeur: |
Scripsit Andy Dingley:
> Use the classes "print-only" and "no-print" in your HTML and place > this CSS in a stylesheet For a starter, valid markup should be used. The OP's code snippet was uninformative except for revealing that the markup was grossly invalid. > .print-only{ > display: none; > visibility: hidden; > } Why set visibility when display: none? To hide something that does not exist (in rendering)? And since the request was to hide a "tag" (i.e., element) during display on screen and to show when the page is printed, one class and and rule should be enough. For example, class="print-only" for elements that should appear in print only, with the CSS rule @media screen { .print-only { display: none; } } Problem solved? This does means that in rendering modes other than screen or print, the content would appear, but nothing was said about such modes in the original posting, and they need to be separately considered anyway, if relevant. > /* Simple standards-based way to turn printing on */ > .print-only { > display: inherit; > visibility: visible; > } Pardon? Apart from being much too complex, this fails to work in many occasions. There will be great confusion if you make an element inherit its display value from its parent. > /* IE hack, because it doesn't support display: inherit; */ > *.print-only { > display: block; > } Getting deeper into trouble, are we not? > tr.print-only { display: table-row; } What's the idea of using an "IE hack" that deploys constructs that are not supported at all by IE? -- Jukka K. Korpela ("Yucca") http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
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#4 |
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Hébergeur: |
"Jukka K. Korpela"
Wrote: > @media screen { .print-only { display: none; } } > > Problem solved? NO! I try to apply that you wrote but the result is to hide the content of the second <td> and not only the <td> tag I'ld wanted to display my tables into a single column on screen and into two columns printing the page to have printed one page only. I wrote here a little sample If you run it you see ancly the first 4 tables but on screen I want to see all 8 tables into a single coliumn and printing all tables on 2 colums Regads <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE> New Document </TITLE> <style> @media screen { .print-only { display: none; } } </style> </HEAD> <BODY> <table><tr><td> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> <td class="print-only"> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>NO</table> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>No</table> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>No</table> </table> </BODY> </HTML> |
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#5 |
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Hébergeur: |
Paolo wrote:
> "Jukka K. Korpela" > > Wrote: > >> @media screen { .print-only { display: none; } } >> >> Problem solved? > > > > NO! > > > > I try to apply that you wrote but the result is to hide the content of the > second <td> and not only the <td> tag > > I'ld wanted to display my tables into a single column on screen and into two > columns printing the page to have printed one page only. > > I wrote here a little sample > > If you run it you see ancly the first 4 tables but on screen I want to see > all 8 tables into a single coliumn and printing all tables on 2 colums > > Regads > > > > <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> > > <HTML> > > <HEAD> > > <TITLE> New Document </TITLE> > > <style> > > @media screen { .print-only { display: none; } } > > </style> > > </HEAD> > > <BODY> > > <table><tr><td> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> > > <td class="print-only"> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>NO</table> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>No</table> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>No</table> > > </table> > > </BODY> > > </HTML> > > You cannot do that! If you remove a TD (which 'display: none' does ) your table will be buggered! Miss match on the number of TDs per row. You either have to put a element within the TD which you toggle the display, or not use tables! From your weird example with nested tables, it looks like you are using tables improperly anyway. -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
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#6 |
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Hébergeur: |
Scripsit Paolo:
>> @media screen { .print-only { display: none; } } >> >> Problem solved? > > NO! You didn't apply the advice properly. To get more specific information, enter more specific information of what you tried. This means telling us the URL. It's generally counter-productive to spot people's errors unless they show us the URL. Sometimes it is possible, but it will teach them (and others) bad habits. So is it immoral for me continue before we have the URL? Maybe, but I feel a bit bad guy today... > I try to apply that you wrote but the result is to hide the content > of the second <td> and not only the <td> tag What? Are you really trying to hide _tags_ and not elements? (The confusion is common, but it was already correct in this thread. Please stand corrected until you understand the point.) And what is "the second <td>" as opposite to "the <td>tag"? > I'ld wanted to display my tables into a single column on screen and > into two columns printing the page to have printed one page only. Sounds strange. I wonder what the real use case is. > I wrote here a little sample URL, please. > <style> Use valid markup. Moreover, close all table-related elements with exlplicit end tags to avoid browser bugs. -- Jukka K. Korpela ("Yucca") http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
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#7 |
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Hébergeur: |
Scripsit Jonathan N. Little:
> You cannot do that! Can't do what? Fullquoting obscures messages. > If you remove a TD (which 'display: none' does ) > your table will be buggered! Why do you think so? > Miss match on the number of TDs per row. And this means... the end of the world as we know it? Such a mismatch might be bad style, but it does not violate any specification. It might be unclear how such a table should be rendered, but table rendering has many other browser-dependencies anyway. Besides, in this case, the outer table has a single row, and the structure of the inner tables is irrelevant, since the hiding takes place at the outer level. Now that you made me bothered to do the OPs job of setting up a copy of the markup as an addressable document, it seems to do just what the OP asked for - on IE 7. Maybe not on other browsers, but this might be due to the missing end tags, or something. > You either have to put a element within the TD which you toggle the > display, or not use tables! No, there's nothing illogical in the idea of making one column of a table "hidden" by setting display: none. It might be slightly more logical to set visibility: collapse, though. > From your weird example with nested > tables, it looks like you are using tables improperly anyway. The example was weird, but my conjecture is that this is a fairly harmless case of using a layout table. I have no idea why one of the inner tables should appear in print but not on screen; it's normal to want just the opposite (to hide a navigation bar in print). -- Jukka K. Korpela ("Yucca") http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
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#8 |
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Hébergeur: |
"Jukka K. Korpela"
wrote > URL, please. > sorry but I have not put online the page because is php and because it do not wark still now > >What? >Are you really trying to hide _tags_ and not elements? (The confusion is common, but it was already correct in this thread. Please stand corrected until you understand the point.) What want you tell me with this phrase? I do not understand fine this >Are you really trying to hide _tags_ and not elements? It is not the some? please try to me with a little sample Thank you |
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#9 |
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Hébergeur: |
Paolo vertrouwde ons toe:
> "Jukka K. Korpela" > wrote [snipped] >> What? Are you really trying to hide _tags_ and not elements? > > It is not the some? > please try to me with a little sample > > Thank you > If you do not know the difference between *tag* and *element* it is time for you to read up on HTML-mark up. This is a tag: <td> This is an element: <td>content</td> Good luck. -- Rob |
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#10 |
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Hébergeur: |
Jukka K. Korpela wrote:
> Scripsit Jonathan N. Little: > >> You cannot do that! > > Can't do what? Fullquoting obscures messages. Firstly, I did *not* full quote, but only quotes his explanation of his attempt and is "markup". You are very knowledgeable and I value your very informative, if sometime terse, posts. But sometimes you can exhibit behavior that indicate that you may need to find a better hobby. > >> If you remove a TD (which 'display: none' does ) >> your table will be buggered! > > Why do you think so? Removing a random TD from a table without compensating on other rows almost always buggers the table display across browsers...it is a common newbie question here with their abuse of row-and-column-span nested-tabled messes... > >> Miss match on the number of TDs per row. > > And this means... the end of the world as we know it? > > Such a mismatch might be bad style, but it does not violate any > specification. It might be unclear how such a table should be rendered, > but table rendering has many other browser-dependencies anyway. No but is usually cause unpredictable display behavior across browsers as each tries to reconcile the inconsistence, usually unwanted side effect for the author... > > Besides, in this case, the outer table has a single row, and the > structure of the inner tables is irrelevant, since the hiding takes > place at the outer level. Who really knows, instead of a real URL to a real example of what he is attempting with get this code snippet. > > Now that you made me bothered to do the OPs job of setting up a copy of > the markup as an addressable document, it seems to do just what the OP > asked for - on IE 7. Maybe not on other browsers, but this might be due > to the missing end tags, or something. Don't blame me, I'm not pointing a gun to your head. Anyway the OP didn't say, used a transitional doctype, and gave a lain code example...one can probably infer that with his real efforts that he is witnessing "odd" display result, else why would he post? > >> You either have to put a element within the TD which you toggle the >> display, or not use tables! > > No, there's nothing illogical in the idea of making one column of a > table "hidden" by setting display: none. It might be slightly more > logical to set visibility: collapse, though. > >> From your weird example with nested >> tables, it looks like you are using tables improperly anyway. > > The example was weird, but my conjecture is that this is a fairly > harmless case of using a layout table. I have no idea why one of the > inner tables should appear in print but not on screen; it's normal to > want just the opposite (to hide a navigation bar in print). > How knows, can you real deduce what the real application is with nested: table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> ?? -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
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#11 |
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Hébergeur: |
Scripsit Jonathan N. Little:
> Firstly, I did *not* full quote, If fact you did: you quoted verbatim Paolo's entire message, rather pointlessly. And you keep quoting too much. You're supposed to select the key sentences only, not just to delete a few lines. >>> If you remove a TD (which 'display: none' does ) >>> your table will be buggered! >> >> Why do you think so? > > Removing a random TD from a table without compensating on other rows > almost always buggers the table display across browsers... No, it just changes the table. If you want to remove a single cell from a multi-line multi-column table, then it is indeed somewhat odd, but then the oddity lies in what you are trying to do, not in the technicalities. And there is nothing in the odd concept that imples that the table will be "buggered". > it is a > common newbie question here with their abuse of row-and-column-span > nested-tabled messes... You didn't take a very close look at the markup you quoted verbatim? (It has nested tables, but in non-confusing manner, and it has no rowspan or colspan attributes.) Comprehensive quoting _is_ a symptom of lack of comprehensive reading. >> Besides, in this case, the outer table has a single row, and the >> structure of the inner tables is irrelevant, since the hiding takes >> place at the outer level. > > Who really knows, I do, because I actually looked at the markup you quoted. > instead of a real URL to a real example of what he > is attempting with get this code snippet. Surely. Surely the OP should state his real problem and throw us the real URL to get with the real problem. But if you comment on a question with some sketchy markup and you quote all of that markup, then surely you should focus on that markup. >> Now that you made me bothered to do the OPs job of setting up a copy >> of the markup as an addressable document, it seems to do just what >> the OP asked for - on IE 7. Maybe not on other browsers, but this >> might be due to the missing end tags, or something. > > Don't blame me, I wasn't blaming you in this statement. Nobody said you should have done the OP's job of setting up a demo page, etc. > one can probably infer that with his real efforts that he is > witnessing "odd" display result, else why would he post? People post for various reasons. Who knows, maybe he tested on Netscape 3 (which has serious difficulties with nested tables when omissible end tags are omitted). :-= > How knows, can you real deduce what the real application is with > nested: > table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> > > <table><tr><td>Have a bad day?<td>yes</table> > > ?? I can deduce that it is a fairly harmless case of using a layout table, because I looked at the markup. Of course it remains unknown what the real application is, but you shouldn't claim that some markup is "weird example with nested tables" when it's actually a very simple case of a two-cell table containing a single-column table in each cell. -- Jukka K. Korpela ("Yucca") http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
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#12 |
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Hébergeur: |
On 2008-03-09, dorayme wrote:
> In article <aPSAj.308134$Pv7.33307@reader1.news.saunalahti.fi >, > "Jukka K. Korpela" <jkorpela@cs.tut.fi> wrote: > >> Scripsit Jonathan N. Little: >> >> > Removing a random TD from a table without compensating on other rows >> > almost always buggers the table display across browsers... >> >> ... And there is nothing in the odd concept that imples that >> the table will be "buggered". > > I was shocked that Jonathan should use this concept without > asking permission from us Australians. Did the Aussies ask permission from the Brits? -- Chris F.A. Johnson <http://cfaj.freeshell.org> ================================================== ================= Author: Shell Scripting Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach (2005, Apress) |
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#13 |
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dorayme wrote:
> In article <23cc7$47d9a480$cef88ba3$23876@TEKSAVVY.COM>, > "Chris F.A. Johnson" <cfajohnson@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On 2008-03-09, dorayme wrote: >>> In article <aPSAj.308134$Pv7.33307@reader1.news.saunalahti.fi >, >>> "Jukka K. Korpela" <jkorpela@cs.tut.fi> wrote: >>> >>>> Scripsit Jonathan N. Little: >>>> >>>>> Removing a random TD from a table without compensating on other rows >>>>> almost always buggers the table display across browsers... >>>> ... And there is nothing in the odd concept that imples that >>>> the table will be "buggered". >>> I was shocked that Jonathan should use this concept without >>> asking permission from us Australians. >> Did the Aussies ask permission from the Brits? > > C'mon Chris, I don't think you understand how Australian this is. > Perhaps I can . It is so Australian that the Brits got it > from the Australians through backwards causation. > This seems all Greek to me ;-) PhilK (sweltering in OZ) -- http://kempster.info |
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#14 |
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Hébergeur: |
dorayme wrote:
> My evidence, after much research on this matter suggests that the > Brits and therefore the Yanks, got it from us. But it is too OT > to go into here. Please send $10 (not US at the moment if you > don't mind) for more on this. > Does the source real matter? I love etymology, but since when can any group claim exclusive rights for the usage of any word? -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
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#15 |
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Hébergeur: |
dorayme wrote:
> In article <13tlpbkpck25rc0@corp.supernews.com>, > Phil Kempster <phil@kempster.info> wrote: > >> dorayme wrote: >>> In article <23cc7$47d9a480$cef88ba3$23876@TEKSAVVY.COM>, >>> "Chris F.A. Johnson" <cfajohnson@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> On 2008-03-09, dorayme wrote: >>>>> In article <aPSAj.308134$Pv7.33307@reader1.news.saunalahti.fi >, >>>>> "Jukka K. Korpela" <jkorpela@cs.tut.fi> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Scripsit Jonathan N. Little: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Removing a random TD from a table without compensating on other rows >>>>>>> almost always buggers the table display across browsers... >>>>>> ... And there is nothing in the odd concept that imples that >>>>>> the table will be "buggered". >>>>> I was shocked that Jonathan should use this concept without >>>>> asking permission from us Australians. >>>> Did the Aussies ask permission from the Brits? >>> C'mon Chris, I don't think you understand how Australian this is. >>> Perhaps I can . It is so Australian that the Brits got it >>> from the Australians through backwards causation. >>> >> This seems all Greek to me ;-) >> PhilK (sweltering in OZ) > > The sort of causation that people are used to, especially > pommies, is either of the instantaneous (up to the speed of > light) variety: > > President Bush presses the horn ring on the steering wheel of his > pickup on his farm down Texas way and the horn blares, a steer > jumps out of his way. > > or of the forward/future directed kind: > > Bush presses a button and a cruise missile with a nuclear bomb > wipes out Tehran several minutes later. > > There was an accusation that "bugger" was a Brit word even though > it is used in a particularly famous and pointed manner in > Australia. > > To cut a long story short, the grounds for the suggestion that we > owe it to the Brits may be based on these conceptions of > causation. But if something in the future can cause something in > the past, and the Brits using "bugger" is a case of this, then > Australians do not owe any debt to the Brits for it. > > My evidence, after much research on this matter suggests that the > Brits and therefore the Yanks, got it from us. But it is too OT > to go into here. Please send $10 (not US at the moment if you > don't mind) for more on this. Never mind the ten bucks. Look it up. It originates from French. The implication of practices at Sodom and associating it with Bush is interesting. -- Gus Wikipedia is your friend |
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