In this specific case, just three columns' worth. So, I don't expect it to
go beyond the width of a page. But in another application where I may use
this orientation, I may have 4 columns, maybe 5. It depends.
That's interesting that you can dynamically generate the XML file. A light
bulb just turned on inside my head. Thanks for that tip!
-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Doan [mailto:bd...@si...]
Sent: Tuesday, April 05, 2005 6:04 PM
To: Al Arzaga
Cc: RLIB USERS
Subject: RE: left-to-right presentation
How many pages across would you go?
You can always make custom XML On the fly (not form a file)
And pass it in with
rlib_add_report_from_buffer($rlib, $SOME_STRING)
You have to manage pages across your self (If the report is going to
come out in PDF) But programatically counting is simple :)
- bob
On Tue, 2005-04-05 at 18:05 -0500, Al Arzaga wrote:
> Well, basically like so:
>
>
> First Name Al Derek
> Last Name Arzaga Giromini
> Phone Number 12345678 31245678
> Color Blue White
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Bob Doan [mailto:bd...@si...]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 05, 2005 5:52 PM
> To: Al Arzaga
> Cc: RLIB USERS
> Subject: Re: left-to-right presentation
>
>
> Hymm.. I'm not quite sure what you are looking for.
>
> Can you make a little example and send it in.
>
> - bob
>
> On Tue, 2005-04-05 at 17:48 -0500, Al Arzaga wrote:
> > Bob,
> >
> > Is there a way to represent the data from left to right, instead of top
to
> > bottom?
> >
> > For example, show the headers along the left, and then print the
> result-set
> > to the right of the headers. All that comes to mind is making each
column
> a
> > report and place them side to side between <pd> tags like in
> fixed_path.xml.
> >
> > For my current needs, this will work as the size of the result set is
> known.
> > But in the instance that the row size is unknown, is there a way to
> > implement this?
> >
> >
> > -Al
--
Bob Doan <bd...@si...>
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