It seems that there is something wrong with the List Boxes in the new update.
Just Dropping a ListBox on the web page without putting any css or styles it messes up the text alignment on the cells. Here is a snapshot showing that .
It is like they have an offset and it grows more on the cells from the right , so more cells you have more off it goes
Hello,
I did a test and I do not see this problem (OS X 10.11.6, Non-Retina screen, Xojo 2017 R2.1, tested with Safari and Firefox).
Maybe you could provide more detail about the system you are seeing this?
[quote=350691:@Christian Mézes]Hello,
I did a test and I do not see this problem (OS X 10.11.6, Non-Retina screen, Xojo 2017 R2.1, tested with Safari and Firefox).
Maybe you could provide more detail about the system you are seeing this?[/quote]
Hello Christian,
Hello,
I am using the WebListBox in my projects but everything seems to be fine.
I created a new project and put only this code in the Shown-event of the WebListBox:
[code]dim i as Integer
dim j as Integer
dim r as new Random
Me.HasHeading = TRUE
Me.ColumnCount = 20
For i = 0 to (Me.ColumnCount - 1)
Me.ColumnWidth(i) = “200”
Me.Heading(i) = "Test " + i.ToText
Next
For j = 0 to 20
Me.AddRow("")
For i = 0 to (Me.ColumnCount - 1)
Me.Cell(j, i) = r.InRange(1, 1000).ToText
Next
Next[/code]
On OS X 10.11.6 and also Windows 7 (with Internet Explorer 11 und current Firefox) the result looks fine (see screenshots) - so I can’t reproduce the problem.
Maybe some others can test if the problem occurs on their computers or maybe you can create a new case in Feedback with an example project that displays the problem…
Well i guess this is my case as im using percentage so, being a web app its very hard to estimate the size of it as it`s dynamic, what would be the best way to handle that ?
Well i guess this is my case as im using percentage so, being a web app its very hard to estimate the size of it as it`s dynamic, what would be the best way to handle that ?
Thanks.[/quote]
First of all, it’s best to not have a mix of pixels, percentages and *. Ultimately * is recalculated as pixels.