How do you transform a data Island and/or XML file with an XSLT in anything besides Explorer. Any kind of semi-well written resource would mean the world to me (or better yet an example). I'd be a dangerous man if I knew how to.
The white my notes section on the bottom left is a div area that is loaded with an Jquery Ajax call just like 2 other areas on the page. This works fine in IE, Safari (PC), Chrome but not in Firefox. It just shows blank white.
I have the following script in a page and it gets an error in IE 6. Says something about an invalid argument but the line number doesn't help since I can't see the javascript code when viewing source.
I have this script in a popup page where the user selects a user ID (id) and that value is then placed into one of the parent window's form text field called "userId". This script works fine in the latest Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox but not in IE 6. Any help on why this script might not work or a better way of accomplishing this task would be appreciated. Code:
Mozilla/Firefox seems to be wrong when rendered elements with sizes given in percents and that are placed into another elements with percentage sizes, if the content overflows them (of course, overflow is set to the value of "scroll")
To check the written above please use the given below code:
I want to open popup on clicking link and onmouseover the link i want to show url in status bar .if i give it in href then onclicking it open the new window and submit the parent window
i use mouseover function to give status bar url it work in IE7 but not in mozilla
I am working on a website and have a button on that page as a bookmark. However, when I go to Mozilla Firefox, it displays the same button to mark as a bookmark. Is there a way to disable the button in Mozilla Firefox to only show up in Internet Explorer at this point using Javascript?
I have an XML page I'm trying to load with javascript to display on Mozilla Firefox. I can get this to work on Internet Explorer but it would not work on Firefox. I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Can someone glance at my short piece of code below and tell me why this wouldn't work on firefox? Code:
Firefox has a Javascript Console that has 3 panels besides "All" and "Clear": "Errors", "Warnings", "Message".
Does anyone know a way to log a message in the Message panel with JavaScript? That would really help debugging. I know there's a way involving XPCOM, but that only works with "trusted" scripts, and scripts loaded thru html aren't trusted.
Found a simple script to show and hide layers. Using this to have an ad with 60px height and onMouseOver 350px
function adtechhideElement(elmID) { for (i = 0; i < document.all.tags(elmID).length; i++) { obj = document.all.tags(elmID)[i]; if (! obj || ! obj.offsetParent) continue; obj.style.visibility = "hidden"; } } function adtechshowElement(elmID) { for (i = 0; i < document.all.tags(elmID).length; i++) { obj = document.all.tags(elmID)[i]; if (! obj || ! obj.offsetParent) continue; obj.style.visibility = ""; } } but the thing is this doesn't work in firefox/mozilla.
Where should I alter this to get it working in firefox?
I have this web browser which opens up a website that has a drop down list showing values that the user can select. And when I the firebug to inspect the elements in the page, what shows in the inspection window is this: [code]What I'm supposed to do is to get the values and update them automatically to the database. I'm actually using HtmlUnit to do this project, and I've heard how I can use getElementById() to get the values. But I don't know how to start.
My JavaScript is trying to POST data to a CGI script (Perl) using XMLHttpRequest. My CGI server gets different data from IE than Mozilla Firefox.
// For Mozilla, req = new XMLHttpRequest(); // For IE req = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); req.onreadystatechange = requestHandler ; // function to handle async response req.open('POST', myURL, true); // use POST req.send('foo=11&bar=22') ;
A Perl CGI script prints the parameters passed to it. $q = new CGI ; foreach my $param ($q->param) { print "$param: " . $q->param($param) . " " ; }
The data received by the CGI script is inconsistent, depending if the client is IE or Mozilla (Firefox) Server result from IE client: foo: 11 bar: 22 Server result from Mozilla Firefox client: POSTDATA: foo=11&bar=22
It seems that the POST data IE sends is more correct than the Mozilla data. Is there another way to send the data in Mozilla so the CGI script will give the same results. I could easily adjust the CGI script, but I think the problem is at the client.
I'm having a small problem, I'm trying to reach this: (This is just regular JavaScript).
But, when I'm trying to get it working on Mozilla FireFox (Combined with MacBook Pro), it fails. So I want to try with jQuery, but I don't know about it,
I built jQuery UI tabs with jQuery UI Accordion embedded into each tab. It works fine on my local machine, it also works fine on all browsers in the development server except using Mozilla Firefox.
I got this problem while disabling Up/Down arrow keys in Mozilla firefox browser useing javascript Given a standard HTML select/option box, I can capture any keypress while the select has focus and stop the select�s option list from changing values in IE but not in Mozilla.
[Code]....
In IE and Mozilla I have no trouble capturing the keyCode, and in IE I can prevent pressing a letter "D" and Up/Down arrows from making the list move to Dead, but the select list will drop to �Dead� in Mozilla. I've tried attaching the event handler to keyup, keydown and keypress, but have yet to find a way in Mozila to capture the keypress and prevent the select list from changing the current selection.
I am making a visual database for our company to give to our sister company in another state so they can have name, phone, email, and a picture. All of this information is in XML outside of the HTML document. I have provided the HTML and XML below. It works perfectly with Mozilla, but all Internet Explorer displays nothing from the XML. Please tell me what I'm doing wrong because I am completely stumped
I have implemented a jQuery hover top level menu & it is working fine in bothIE 7& 8. However, when I am executing the same code in Mozilla Firefox, it is not rendering hover effect at all. Also, I am adding a <span> using jQuery if JavaScript isn't enabled. This span is also not getting added in Mozilla.
Following is the code that I am using. <script type="text/javascript" src="[URL]"></script> <script> $(document).ready(function(){ $("ul.subnav").parent().append("<span></span>"); $("ul.pnode li a").mouseover(function() { //When trigger is clicked... //Following events are applied to the subnav itself (moving subnav up and down) $(this).parent().find("ul.subnav").slideDown('fast').show(); //Drop down the subnav on click $(this).parent().hover(function() { }, function(){ $(this).parent().find("ul.subnav").slideUp('slow'); //When the mouse hovers out of the subnav, move it back up }); //Following events are applied to the trigger (Hover events for the trigger) }).hover(function() { $(this).addClass("subhover"); //On hover over, add class "subhover" }, function(){ //On Hover Out $(this).removeClass("subhover"); //On hover out, remove class "subhover" }); }); </script>
I came to know that IE & Mozilla see .parent differently.I have tried everything but not able to get this stuff working in Mozilla. I am using Firefox 3.5.5 version.
I've been working with Javasrcipt on Firefox (a mozilla off-shoot but very similar to Safari on Mac) but can't seem to find any kind of debugging window. The script either works or nothing happens.
Specifically, I am trying to compare dates. I had a simple function that I know works in IE doesn't work correctly on Firefox. I found a much more elaborate script on another site that should work around browser issues and got the same result.
When a user visits index.html on my site, they input their email address. The form redirects them to "confirmed.html", the form also writes a cookie with their email address.When the user gets to confirmed.html, I use an "if/else" statement. If there is a cookie (email address), I append ("#"+user_email) to the window location. I do this so that when the user shares with "addthis" tool, I will know who is sharing. Unfortunately addthis only shares the current page, so I want new users to the site to be redirected to index.html My code works in firefox, but not safari. In safari it just seems to redirect to index nomatter what. The user never even sees confirmed.html.
var user_email = unescape(document.cookie); if (document.cookie) {
Ok, So check out [URL].. The index jquery works fine on all three browsers (last I checked) Now go to [URL]..php or any other secondary page. The jquery has gone loopy and is not working! It seems my CSS partially works, my jquery does not work at all... totally lost on why my jquery is not activating.