From: Marty J. <mar...@co...> - 2010-08-12 10:50:59
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That's the cleanest idea about how to do this I've seen in a long while. Make it like css but be very selective about how many knobs to have. I like it a lot. On 08/12/2010 03:44 AM, Alessandro Pellizzari wrote: > Il giorno mer, 11/08/2010 alle 20.47 +0000, Neil Graham ha scritto: > >> An alternative is to use Top,Bottom,Left,Right instead of X and Y. But >> you then have to do decide what happens if Top _and_ Bottom or Left _and_ >> right are specified. > > Why not go the whole way and make it css-style? :) > > silly-walks.jpg > { > left: 10px; > right: 100px; > top: 50%; > bottom: 20%; > width: 64px; > height: 64px; > background-color: #aaa; > } > > right would "overwrite" left becaus it comes after it, and bottom > overwrites top for the same reason. > > bottom: 20% means (as in Gtk) "the point 20% from bottom of the image > shold be 20% from the bottom of the screen". This way writing > left:50%;top:50%; places the image at the very center of the screen (and > not shifted down and right). > > It is extendable, so if you want (in the future) to implement a rounded > box you can add > > border-radius: 5px; > border-color: #000; > border-width: 1px; > > Maybe a little bit overkill for placing icons, but it could be used for > the whole styling, as gnome is doing, so maybe one day it will be > integrated in gtk+. > > Bye. > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > This SF.net email is sponsored by > > Make an app they can't live without > Enter the BlackBerry Developer Challenge > http://p.sf.net/sfu/RIM-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > Lxde-list mailing list > Lxd...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/lxde-list > |