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| DOMINOPOWER MAGAZINE ARTICLE DIRECTORY |
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Internet Technologies > HTML and CSS
Home > Internet Technologies > HTML and CSS
Articles
Using a reusable code approach to HTML select option lists DominoPower Magazine - October 2003 If you've ever done any work with Struts custom tag libraries, you've invariably come across the html:select tag, and the accompanying html:options tag. Used together, these tags render a nice HTML select statement, which gives you the familiar drop-down list of choices from which to choose your input value. This list of choices is the jumping off point for Jeff Chilton's new programming power series.
One reader's opinion on HTML mailing DominoPower Magazine - December 2002 We've been experimenting with sending out our DominoPower tips in HTML format. Editor-in-Chief David Gewirtz asked for reader feedback, and this month in Letters to the Editor you can see one example.
Keep lookin' good with Cascading Style Sheets DominoPower Magazine - May 2002 You don't look good unless your software looks good. You can make sure your software looks as cool as it can by using Cascading Style Sheets. Previously, Andrew Stuart showed you how to start working with Cascading Style Sheets with virtually no code at all. In this article, he continues this discussion by taking a look at both "embedded" Cascading Style Sheets and "linked" Cascading Style Sheets.
Cascading Style Sheets make you look good DominoPower Magazine - April 2002 The truth is that ultimately, end users, clients, existing customers, potential customers, and your company management all make their first assessment of the value of your software based upon their first impressions of how cool it looks. You can make sure your software looks as cool as it can be by using Cascading Style Sheets. It's easy! This month Andrew Stuart will show you how you can start working with Cascading Style Sheets with virtually no code at all.
Implementing dynamic drop-down menus using Domino and Internet Explorer DominoPower Magazine - March 2002 Developing for a Web browser instead of a Notes client can take some getting used to. One of the application functions that Andrew Stuart uses regularly in Notes client applications is cascading field values. In this article, he'll show you how to build a small demonstration Domino application that does just that.
Adding response documents to your expanding and collapsing response document rows DominoPower Magazine - January 2002 Last month, Andrew Stuart showed you how to build HTML tables with expanding and collapsing response document rows. In this article, things get a little more fancy as he shows you how to add response documents to your view and how to prepare to selectively show or hide all the responses for any row.
Expanding and collapsing response document rows with Domino and Internet Explorer DominoPower Magazine - December 2001 In this article, Andrew Stuart will show you how to build HTML tables with expanding and collapsing response document rows.
Changing Rich Text font styles on the Web DominoPower Magazine - August 2001 When Senior Technical Editor Dan Velasco wrote a tip about applying stylesheet styles to Notes Rich Text fields on the Web and asked for feedback from you, the faithful DominoPower readers, he received a lot of responses. This led to create a second tip on the same subject, and it also helped him to solve another tricky problem. In this article, Dan has reprinted the original tips along with what he learned from your feedback and some additional commentary.
Domino forms for all DominoPower Magazine - October 2000 Wouldn't it be great if you could Domino-enable just one or two Web forms on any site, regardless of whether it was running ASP pages, static HTML, or being accessed by AvantGo users? Or, what if you could use standard HTML forms generated in any Web design package, yet have the forms fed automatically into Domino workflows? Well, Jeffrey R. Burrows shows you how you can do just that, with a mixture of old Lotus Notes techniques, tried and tested Web technology, and a sprinkling of new code.
Advanced building of DHTML views with Internet Explorer DominoPower Magazine - September 2000 When using categorized views from a browser, a request is made to the server every time you expand or collapse a category. Matt Holthe has found a way to eliminate this round trip. In part two of this series, things get more advanced as he shows you how to create views with two categories.
Building DHTML views with Internet Explorer DominoPower Magazine - August 2000 When using categorized views from a browser, every time you expand or collapse a category, a request is made to the server. Matt Holthe has found a way to eliminate this round trip. In a two-part series, he'll show you how to use DHTML to create a categorized view where the categories can be expanded and collapsed on the client.
Keeping user credentials in a frameset DominoPower Magazine - May 2000 The way each Web browser handles the pages our sites serve up is important to understand, because the user experience is really based upon what they actually see, not what we intended for them to see. In this article, Chris Stoner goes "under the covers" to help shed a little light on the issue of caching credentials.
How to use cookies with Notes and the Web DominoPower Magazine - December 1999 Wouldn't it be cool if you could use Web-based cookies with Notes and the Web -- together? Well, now you can. In this informative article by contributing editor Jeffrey R. Burrows, you can learn how to bake your own cookies into your applications. There are even great code examples in this article. So read now to learn where the cookie crumbles. Don't get your hand caught in the cookie jar!
Never trust a browser on faith DominoPower Magazine - June 1999 This month, Editor-in-Chief David Gewirtz gets very specific about an HTML coding problem that could reach up and "byte" you on the…but you'll need to read this article to learn how to avoid making a very easy HTML mistake.
Using dynamic HTML and JavaScript in Domino DominoPower Magazine - September 1998 We've long grown used to web pages that are sequential -- one object following another. But users familiar with highly dynamic user interfaces in standalone programs want to see the same functionality online. The keys to creating dynamically updated, interactive web-based user interfaces are two key technologies: Dynamic HTML and JavaScript. Kevin Hoffman takes us behind the scenes of a project he built using both these technologies. This article is detailed, in-depth, and incredibly valuable to anyone building high-profile web sites.
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