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Positioning of controls
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À
31/03/2006 12:28:17
Cetin Basoz
Engineerica Inc.
Izmir, Turquie
Information générale
Forum:
ASP.NET
Catégorie:
Autre
Versions des environnements
Environment:
ASP.NET
OS:
Windows XP SP2
Database:
MS SQL Server
Divers
Thread ID:
01109532
Message ID:
01109592
Vues:
34
>>>>>>There must be something I am missing about the positioning of controls on an ASP.NET web page. (ASP.NET 2, VS 2005). Drag and drop is not working the way I am used to with desktop IDEs like VFP, Delphi, and VB.NET. When I drag and drop from the ASP.NET toolbox onto a page in Design mode, the control snaps into position next to the previously placed control, regardless of where I try to drop it. Similarly, within the Design window I can't drag a control to a different position, above or below another control, etc. What's up?
>>>>>
>>>>>Right click on page and set to grid layout (flow layout is preferred though).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Oooooh. That's an ugly choice, isn't it? I do want flow layout. What would be great would be the ability to have vertical flow layout and horizontal grid layout.
>>>>
>>>>Will play around with it a little. Thanks for the info.
>>>
>>>With flow layout you can simply have a table to position your controls as you want.
>>
>>
>>Aha! That may be exactly what I want.
>>
>>What I really need to do is study HTML some more. I never worked with earlier versions of ASP, and certainly not the "classic" combo of HTML and Notepad. Am probably making a typical rookie mistake now of thinking that because the ASP.NET IDE looks like familiar desktop language IDEs, it will behave like them. The HTML is still there, just disguised to a certain extent.
>>
>>Just what I need, yet another new thing to learn. I think I am up to ASP, VB (book learning only so far), the VS 2005 IDE, and now HTML. I probably better throw XML and CSS in there, too, as lower priorities. What's that old saying? -- "Be careful what you wish for, you just might get it" ;-)
>
>Oh you can gain some time forgetting about ASP:) Only similarity with ASP.Net is name.


I meant ASP.NET 2. I plan to ignore the earlier versions, and from what I have seen of them am grateful to be able to do so.
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