Overlib width and settings around it
Posted: 05 Jan 2009, 04:45
Hi guys,
for record: I have read a few of the overlib articles in this forum, unfortunately, I was not able to find the information, I require.
As many other users, I want to "mess around" with the overlib-effects a little. I need to be able to display a total and max of characters of 1500 per image description for an internal community project. As far as I noticed, all overlib-transparent "tool tips" seem to have the same "window-width". When I set the overlib-transparent "window-width" to the standard 500px, a text of more than 1000 characters is not displayed. When I set it up to 1000 or more (or only 750) the width of the overlib-box is still not changing but the text is displayed, but in a such way, that the box is getting awfully long so that the user would have to scroll down to read the overlib-transparent-text-window. By doing this, you often lose focus on the picture so that the overlib-description-text is vanishing.
I would like to know, how exactly I can set the height and width of the overlib effect, so that the box is rather big in width than in (actual) height.
Thank you so much for suggestions in advance!
Granseigneur
for record: I have read a few of the overlib articles in this forum, unfortunately, I was not able to find the information, I require.
As many other users, I want to "mess around" with the overlib-effects a little. I need to be able to display a total and max of characters of 1500 per image description for an internal community project. As far as I noticed, all overlib-transparent "tool tips" seem to have the same "window-width". When I set the overlib-transparent "window-width" to the standard 500px, a text of more than 1000 characters is not displayed. When I set it up to 1000 or more (or only 750) the width of the overlib-box is still not changing but the text is displayed, but in a such way, that the box is getting awfully long so that the user would have to scroll down to read the overlib-transparent-text-window. By doing this, you often lose focus on the picture so that the overlib-description-text is vanishing.
I would like to know, how exactly I can set the height and width of the overlib effect, so that the box is rather big in width than in (actual) height.
Thank you so much for suggestions in advance!
Granseigneur