I have tried several things, using several Javascript books, but can't get
this to work in Netscape (latest version) and Firefox (latest v.). It works
in MIE and Opera fine. A box (defined by a css layer) is supposed to pop
out to the right when the corresponding box on the far left is moused over.
The first function defines a layer id to the next function which pops out
the box. After debugging in Venkman, it looks like the first function
cannot define the layer id properly to the second function, which actually
slides the box (layer) to the right.
I thought that the getElementById function was supposed to work for Firefox,
but I must be using it wrong(???)
To see how it's supposed to work, view the following page in MIE or Opera:
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 an application that draws a selection rectangle over a map image. I can get it to work fine in IE and Opera, but not Firefox/Netscape.
I've thrown the following small example together to illustrate the problem - the problem being that FF/NE initially draw my rectangle before the icon changes immediately to the black no-entry icon. Then, when I let go of the mouse, the rectangle continues drawing, but it doesn't stop as the mouseup has already fired of course.
IE was doing the same, but I found the ondragstart/cancelDragDrop solution to that. I can't find what appears to be a similar solution for FF/NE.....
I have a script which works just fine on Mozilla Firefox 1.0 and Netscape Navigator 7.2, but it doesn't work so well on IE 6.0...
Allow me to explain what the script is all about. A select element ("selTable") in a form ("myForm") is populated by values of table names in a database (this is done using PHP). The values are like this: k1, k2, k3, etc.
When a user clicks on a button ("btnQuery"), the values in the table are copied into a text box ("txtQueryStr")with the words "SELECT * FROM" appended to the front (e.g. when button is clicked, the text box (initially empty) will show "SELECT * FROM k1, k2, k3" Code:
I have a calculator that works perfectly fine on IE with four js functions all working. I created it on FrontPage. But on Firefox or Netscape nothing happens when I hit the Calculate button (which calls doMath() and verify() onclick). I can't figure out what to look for and where to look.
I know it's not the browser cause I have a very very simple calculator that works on both IE and Firefox. There must be some wrong code or missing code that I just can't find.
I'm trying to create a control which when the mouse button gets pressed on one div an absolute positioned div pops up in place of the cursor. From there the cursor should interact with the dialog before the mouse button is released. In other words one element will catch onmousedown, display the popup, and the popup element will catch onmouseup. This works fine in IE as the popup automatically accepts following events, but my problem is in Firefox.
In Firefox everything behind the popup still receive events even though they can't be seen (hidden by the popup). I have to release the mouse button and then click on the popup again before it accepts the onmouseup event.
I also used a different cursor on the popup to see if Firefox recognized it was there at all. Still the cursor doesn't change until I release themouse button and move the cursor across the popup element.
I've tried focus/blur, timeout delays, hiding the first element (the one which receives onmousedown) but nothing works.
The only thing that works is hiding the entire body and then using setTimeout to show the entire body again 1ms later. Obviously though that is very ugly.
the Javascript function firstChild() works as expected in IE but returns "undefined" in Netscape 7.1
Here is the sample html code that I used. I am asking the javascript to print out the id of the child of para1. IE correctly prints the string "italicsid", but Netscape gives me an "undefined". Why so? Code:
I have been trying to programme the script below so that it will work in Netscape Browser 7.1, 4.73 and Microsoft Internet Explorer; but without success. When I attempt to execute the function flyingsleigh() I receive a JavaScript error: Invalid argument at line:19 Char:7 The idea of this script is to make a graphic run across the browser screen - left to right when the form button is pressed, executing the function using onClick event handler. Code:
I am having an issue dynamically displaying a table row.
What I would like to accomplish is when I click the show label, the 2nd row of the table is made visiable but it also remains in the table order (all td elements should align).
The below code works in IE but in Netscape, both the label and the text box apear in the first TD element instead of having the label appear in the first TD element and the text box apearing in the 2nd TD element. Does anyone know a way around this so the code works in both IE and Netscape? Code:
I have a script that runs a sprite animation on the canvas, adapted from here: [URL] After wondering why it wouldn't work on Safari or older versions of Firefox, I saw this: [URL] and implemented the suggested shim. However, I'm still getting some errors that I can't explain for the life of me. To make this easy for everyone, I threw it in a jsfiddle: [URL]
the below function allows me to pass the screen resoltion variable to asp through a cookie. It works in IE and Opera but not in Netscape. What is the problem?
Code: <script language="JavaScript"> <!-- function checkres(){ if('<%=Request.Cookies("screenres")%>' != window.screen.width + 'x' + window.screen.height){ document.cookie = 'screenres=' + window.screen.width + 'x' + window.screen.height window.location.href("default.asp") } } // --> </script> if someone doesn't know what the asp line does, then 800x600 may be an output. Like below
Code: <script language="JavaScript"> <!-- function checkres(){ if(魸x600' != window.screen.width + 'x' + window.screen.height){ document.cookie = 'screenres=' + window.screen.width + 'x' + window.screen.height window.location.href("default.asp") } } // --> </script> the if statement doesn't appear to be executed in NS...so I presume that the error is in the line
I have created a floating layer using Javascript that remains always on top of page on scrolling.Issue is,at some point while scrolling,the layer flickers continuously.
The html page is as follows:
Many common software systems, JavaScript has a history of security problems. Many of these problems could allow a person with malevolent intent to steal sensitive information from a visitor. The number and type of such holes in security vary among browsers and operating system versions. Most JavaScript security holes have been caught and fixed, but new ones are being discovered all the time. For a list of current security holes check out your browser's and operating system's Web pages. As a Web site author, it is your responsibility to keep up-to-date on the current status of known security holes in the applications you create.
Signing Scripts. In Chapter 11, I explained that JavaScript does not provide the ability to directly access files on the client computer. This can be a very large hurdle to overcome if you're trying to upload a file to a server from the client computer. Fortunately, file uploading is one of many functional enhancements that signed scripts provide. Signed scripts are specially packaged scripts that have been verified and signed to be correct and non-threatening. These scripts have additional rights on the client computer that allow a programmer to do many things that he wouldn't otherwise be able to.
With the introduction of Netscape 4.0, a new security model was put in place that would allow digitally signed scripts to bypass some of the restrictions that had previously been placed on them. A signed script can request expanded privileges from the visitor and, with the visitor's permission, gain access to restricted data. A signed script requests these additional permissions through LiveConnect, which allows your JavaScript code to communicate with the Java Capabilities API. The security model allows JavaScript to access certain classes in Java in order to extend its functionality while still maintaining tight security for the client.
A digital signature is a fingerprint of the original programmer, and it allows the security model of the browser to detect where (or from whom) it originated. A script signer can be a person or an organization. By signing a script, you acknowledge yourself as the author and accept responsibility for the program's actions. A signed script contains a cryptographic checksum, which is just a special value that ensures the signed script has not been changed. When a digital signature is detected, you are assured that the code has not been tampered with since the programmer signed it.
Once you finish writing a script, you can use the Netscape Signing Tool to digitally sign it. Signing a script does the following:
Unambiguously assigns ownership of the script to a person or organization.
Allows an HTML page to use multiple signed scripts.
Places the signed script into a Java Archive (JAR) file.
Places the source of the script in the JAR file.
Once a user confirms the origin of the script and is assured that it has not been tampered with since its signing, he or she can then decide whether to grant the privileges requested by the script based on the validated identity of the certificate owner and validated integrity of the script.
JAVASCRIPT FILE IS AS FOLLOWS:
AND CSS FILE IS AS FOLLOWS:
At some point while scrolling,the div 'movable' flickers continuously,while at some other point,it is perfectly stable.
I am using the double combo script (see below) on my site so people can selet reports that open in a new window with no toolbars.
To date the script has been working flawlessly but today I've noticed the "Go" button has 'gone' when viewed in Netscape or Firefox.
I've gone over the script many times trying to work out what's wrong but can't see anything. Can someone please have a look at the script (with a fresh perspective) and tell me what's wrong :confused: :confused: :confused: ?
Also is it possible to add a blank line between "2006 Deferred Matches" and "2005 Tournament Standings" ? Code:
I'm trying to set the align property/attribute of an IFrame to center but its not working (see below). Can anyone please tell me what's going on, and if there's a work around for this?
I am working on a Javascript application and i am facing a strange behavior of the application in IE. I am creating a table at runtime using DHTML and registering event for the table row click. When i deploy this application on web server and browse the application, the events fires in firefox and chrome but in IE the events are not fired. If i browse the application from the server with localhost, the application triggers the events and fails when i use machine name.
The following is the source code:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <title></title>
I have are created dynamically buttonset toggle radio button with following code. All is working okay but just I have added onclick function which is doing window.location which is working with FireFox but not working with IE and google chrome.
<script type="text/javascript"> var chars = 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'; $(function () { $('#btnSet').buttonstrip();
I have a jQuery code to allow users to login using a lightbox [URL] and immediately start downloading files, without being redirected or having the page reloaded. It's perfectly working in Firefox but Internet Explorer keeps showing the login box until I reload the page
Suppose,closing the browser through Browser Close Button(Top Right Corner cross(x) button), i have to execute some ASP script , for that, in body onUnLoad Event calling a fucntion called CloseWin(e,frm), it is working in Internet Explorer successfully , But in FireFox not working. how to solve this problem. or any other way to get the co-ordinates of browser close button( code for both IE and Firefox).
code follows
function CloseWin(e,frm) { //frm required for my program var bButtonClicked = false;
When the select menu is changed, the text in the textarea tag is changed. But after something is typed in the textarea tag, the select change functionallity no longer works under Firefox 3.6.13. Firebug shows it as being changed, and it still works with IE8.Am I doing something wrong? Is there a workaround?
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
I'm trying to do up a contact form that after a user submits the information, the drop down contact box will slide back up instead of redirecting to another page. The script works fine in Chrome and Safari, but Firefox and IE keeps redirecting to the php page.