I have a web page that is using a background image:<BODY BGCOLOR=#FFFFFF BACKGROUND=#IMAGE_PREFIX#back01.jpg>I include a 'Print' link on tha page:<A HREF="javascript:window.print()">Click to Print This Page</A>When the page prints, the background image in not included. My IE settings are set - Make sure Print background images and colors is checked under Printing.
I am having an issue with setting the background-image of a another div #x to the background image of #y.Correct me if I am wrong but I think you would do this in a simple case by saying
$ ( '#x' ).
[code]....
So when it does it, it is getting the URL of the generator (I logged it. what is actually being passed is [URL] This would require a server call to generate a new image, In this particular application, even if it wasn't exactly the image y had it would be acceptable. But it's not doing it. It is not getting any image at all. Am I doing something wrong, i.e. is it supposed to just work? I would think not, since the page has already been rendered. This is almost an ajax situation but I don't know how to do it for an image. I don't really want to generate a new image anyway, I'd be very happy to get the one that's already there. How would I access the actual image already attached to y and not do another server call?
I'm trying to use the following javascript to print a <div> on a web page:
function CallPrint(strid) { var prtContent = document.getElementById(strid); var WinPrint =
[Code]....
Using the above javascript I have no background images although they're included in the <div> and the text is formatted LtR instead of RtL. Any ideas how I can get the <div> to print correctly using javascript.
I have a hidden popup that I populate with content and it dynamically expands to the size of the content. I then show the popup. When a user clicks on another link, it populates the popup with longer or shorter content. When the content is SHORTER, it seems to show the background image that I'm using expanding to the height of the previous size of the popup. I've tried setting the height manually with JS, no luck. This only happens on IE6.
I need to modify IE print settings(paper size, print orientation) automatically, by javascript and can not use ActiveX control or reduce IE security setting.
I need the top of a background image to always be 50% from the top. I think I read that some browsers do not like the backgroundPositionY property so I used the following script which finds the right value but doesn't apply it to the background position. What should I change?
I have one image (sampleImage.png).. Already i connected my pc to printer....Manually i open the image and select print option , then i got image from printer....Now i want print image using javascript....
I am building a simple t-shirt creator app for my shop and I am using the interface.js library: [URL].. docs/drag to drag/drop and re-size the graphic on the shirt background image.
Once the user has chosen a spot to put the graphic, how do I save the background image of the t-shirt with the image they dropped in the correct spot? Like, to merge the two graphics in place?
I am trying to recreate this functionality on my website where you can drag a background image around and when you get ot the edges of the image it bounces back to the edge of that corrosponding side. have a look at the site in question - [url]
So far i have recreated the top left and right edges using
I have a large image that is located in a folder called "large_image" . I want to use javascript to resize that image to a size so that it would fit to page before it is sent to printer. Is that possible.
I want my webpage to print an image when the user clicks the "Print this Image" button. I have tried but when I click the button it prints all the contents including the image! What I want is that when the user clicks the button it shud print only the image in that page and nothing else. I have placed the image and the button in a form tag, in a separate table below the main table in which the main contents of the site contains, but it still dont work. How I can make it work?
I have this working fine, and I can append the preloaded image to a hidden div then fade the div in for a smooth effect.
Problem is I want to set this preloaded image as a css background image, not as a <img /> in a container. But if when the image is loaded, instead of .prepend() I do .css() and set the css property of a background-image to be the preloaded images URL, then when it carries on with displaying it the browser loads the image again. Rather than using the preloaded one.
I want the image to be a background image as I want it centered in the page background, even if it is too large for the viewport.
I have a LARGE, hi-resolution image that I am trying to use as the background for a page. Because it is so large, it takes a while to download. Because of this, I wanted to load the image behind-the-scenes and show it once it is downloaded.
To accomplish this, I'm using the following JQuery code:
This code clearly downloads an image and appends it to my DIV element. However, I really want to set this downloaded image to the background-image CSS property of my DIV. The reason why is because I have content inside the DIV that should serve as the foreground.
How do I dynamically download an image, fade it in, and use it as a background?
I have a form that displays an icon beside a field if it contains a negative value and want to remove the icon when the value is no longer negative.
I was doing note_icon.src = '' but this produces "Directory Index Forbidden by Rule" messages in the server error log because the empty string is being interpreted as meaning the directory where the script is running on the server.
I'm using Javascript to change an image on a page without reloading the page. The problem is that my images are various widths (but identical heights), yet each image I change it to uses the width of the first image.
This probably isn't that difficult, but it's a bit out of my league.
What I'm looking to do is find an image name, I think using document.images [], then strip the extension, then use the DOM to set the result as the class name of a div.
Something like this:
document.getElementById("thediv").className = [image src without extension];
The image that I'm looking to identify will change from 01.gif to 40.gif, and is served by a lame proprietary server-side tool. I can't control what it is at any time, but it will always be from 01.gif to 40.gif.
There will be corresponding styles in my stylesheet that would give me the effect of <div id="thediv" class="01"> (except set by the DOM) after the script has done its magic.