NameSilo

iframe height attribute (%) problem

Spacemail by SpaceshipSpacemail by Spaceship
Watch

Szan

New Member
Impact
0
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
AfternicAfternic
I didn't see any iframes on your page just regular frames, but maybe try removing the column attribute.

Maybe try something like this:

<frameset rows="20%,*" framespacing="0" frameborder="NO" border="0">

or:

<frameset rows="20%,80%" framespacing="0" frameborder="NO" border="0">
 
0
•••
Thanks for your answer. Some more detail about my question: You are right, the page is a framed and Dreamweaver templated one. If you see the source code of the bottom half of the page with light blue background (this is the body frame) you can find somewhere the following iframe code:

<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="content" -->
<iframe name="content" src="bemutatkozas_content.htm" marginwidth="11" align="right" width=480 height="90%" frameborder="2" scrolling="auto"></iframe>
<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->

The height=90% is the problematic attribute because this way it doesn't shows the linked bemutatkozas_content.htm page but if I set the height attribute not in % but eg. pixel (height=90) the iframe works well.
When I tried to apply the same above iframe code on a new blank page there was no problem at all, the % worked well. Strange situation, at least for me.
I'don't know wether the DTD specification has any effect on iframe behaviour?!

Szan
 
0
•••
Okay I see what you're talking about now, but I don't understand why it only works with the height in pixels either. I'm thinking that it may have something to do with where you've used absolute positioning for some of your divs or something, but I dunno. :(
 
0
•••
are table heights getting in the way?
 
0
•••
Dynadot — .com TransferDynadot — .com Transfer
Appraise.net

We're social

Escrow.com
Spaceship
Rexus Domain
CryptoExchange.com
Domain Recover
CatchDoms
DomainEasy — Payment Flexibility
DomDB
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back