Nice.

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I'm happy to take credit for it and all, but that's a feature of the web browser. Every modern web browser does it. Try it on the old species index.shari2 wrote:one of the features I particularly like about this software is that when you hit the back button it takes you back to the exact place on the page where you left from. For instance, if I'm viewing Y. brevis on the species index and click back it takes me back to the species index at Y. brevis, not the top of the list.
Nice.
Ok, so how the hell are we supposed to design an educational page where the text is attached to a photograph that it relates to with this software? I can't relate to a system where I have no idea what it's going to appear like for someone else with a different monitor.shafer wrote:Whoa Martin! Slow down with the floating images buddy!Martin Thoene wrote:This is a test.
I want to see what this look likes from a link:
http://community.loaches.com/species-in ... -lineolata
Hmmmmm.......I've looked at it 5 times or so now and every time the last photo doesn't appear????
(that's the Male sitting on a rock with bubbles rushing by)
I can see it on the site ok![]()
Martin.
Personally, that page has way too many images on it for a species profile. But, even with that many images, there's too many that are floating left and right to have any hope of lining up correctly on a flexible page. If you want to do something like that, you're going to have to get more advanced and start sticking images in a table (a plain table with no border).
When you have that many images on a page floating, I have a really hard time as a viewer figuring out what caption goes with what image. Especially when some are on the left and some are on the right.
But, I see the male on the rock with the bubbles rushing by. No problem.
I realize it's frustrating to have to design web pages that work on a variety of different monitor sizes. (and FONT sizes!) It's been a challenge ever since day one of the web, and this software doesn't make it any harder (or easier) than competing products.Martin Thoene wrote:Ok, so how the hell are we supposed to design an educational page where the text is attached to a photograph that it relates to with this software? I can't relate to a system where I have no idea what it's going to appear like for someone else with a different monitor.
Is the only way with this (he says guessing) to stack full widtrh pictures one above the other with captions between them?
I can live with that, but it takes away any 'design' element from the whole thing. It's like reading a list almost.....boring.
I get the idea that a lot of text wrapped around images kind of locks them in, but what can you do when you don't have sufficient text to do that, but you're trying to show information related to a picture?
So basically as I'm with the 50% then.... half of the people who look at a profile will go "That looks cool" while the other half will wonder what the hell I was up to, pretty much as I did when I saw Mark's M. triangularis profile which looks perfectly OK to him......and that is a simple layout.
Martin.
is sitting with the lower edges of the letters inside the image...The differences are clear in this photograph, also note the shape of the front leading edge of
.............male, more flowing in the female
Ok, yeah, I see that. That's a tricky section to work out. There's really one too many images in that section for the text, plus it's kinda awkward with one narrow right-aligned image, one wide right-aligned image, and then one left-aligned image all in a row. Let me try changing it to something else.shari2 wrote:Ok. This is weird. I clicked the link again 2 seconds ago and now the line that is hanging in the image is this one:.............male, more flowing in the female
working on it, eh?
Already saw it. I wondered if you had "tweaked" it, realized the animations moved....and then saw a typo, so wanted to edit it.Here, take a look now: http://community.loaches.com/species-in ... -lineolata
You can edit the page and see how I constructed it. It's really simple.
Ok, so I'm done editing: http://community.loaches.com/species-in ... -lineolataMartin Thoene wrote:That's when I discovered the table. So tell me oh guru, how "simple" is it?
As there's no limit on a page, it would seem a great pity to not be able ,in cases like Sewellia lineolata where we have pictures showing sexual differences, not to be able to illustrate that. I know that anyone can view all the images and we can caption those, but there'll be no coherent order to doing it that way. Far better from an educational point of view to lay it all out like an article.
It's not every species after all. Some warrant more coverage, and sometimes it's stronger in image than it is in text. I can write reams describing the sexual differences or I can say look here, and here, note this and this. Sometimes there will be insufficient text for full wraps.
It worked OK for the Loach Almanac though yeah? Loads of text.
You said the Botia unknown01 was good though. Is that because it's more vertically stacked? Stacked I can do if I have to ......but I'll want to go 600 x 600 every time then because space is so.....tempting
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