Again??? AGAIN????

N

NYC XYZ

Firefox Nuisance No. 45.392:

Mouseover "tags" (explanatory text which appears when pointer is left
over an image) get truncated if too long (",,,"), which is very
annoying when the "tag" (or whatever it's properly called) is an
integral part of understanding the visuals, as here at
<http://www.slate.com/id/2139195/entry/2139202/>.


WHY OH WHY DO YOU DO THIS, FIREFOX??????
 
N

NYC XYZ

Gudmund said:
It does look irritating, and I hope there's some setting to change it
(doubt it, though).

But why would anyone do this??? How extremely annoying computer
programmers can be! I wonder what is the culture there which makes for
such things.
Workaround: right-click in the image, Properties, maximize the resulting
window, then you can read the whole "ABC News reported that Sheikh
Mohammed was "begging to confess" after about two minutes of
waterboarding." or whichever text there is.

RIght, that too.
BTW: you're sure to get chided for crossposting - to a host of different
fora. I noticed it when I wanted to send this reply. Don't cross-post
like this if you want to be taken seriously and get answers, please.

I've reinstated the original NGs x-posted since your response contains
something of a solution to the problem so widely posted.

As for widely posting, well, the bigger the Net the better -- pun
intended! Also -- precisely because -- the NGs are all related...so, a
bigger net and all....

BR,
Gudmund

I hope you're not one of them whiners about top-posting, either, or
typos, or "minimalist redaction" or stream-of-consciousness free
association or not being politically correct enough or expressing
strong opinions strongly....
 
N

NYC XYZ

Ken said:
Interesting, but I don't get a truncated Alt text there (FF 1.5.0.2). I
see the entire "waterboarding" sentence.

?!?!??!?!!!!!

HOW COULD THIS BE????

I HATE COMPUTERS!!!!!

There's nothing so terrible as unrequited love...except for illogical
(seeming) machines (and software)!!!!
The cross-posting has already been mentioned, but just out of curiosity,
why was your message sent to the
microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser group? It may not
have been your intent, but it sure looks like at an attempt at baiting
an anti-Firefox crowd when you post a FF "nuisance" in a competing
browser's forum. It would be a little like posting an IE complaint in
this forum...

Well, it would have been intersting to see what responses the
anti-Firefox/Mozilla crowd might have, but also because there may be
issues common to html browsers involved in this case -- especially
because many people use both, like me.

I prefer Firefox, but increasingly its only advantage seems to be
tabbed browsing and a more intuitive text-scaling capability.
 
D

Dustan

NYC said:
Firefox Nuisance No. 45.392:

Mouseover "tags" (explanatory text which appears when pointer is left
over an image) get truncated if too long (",,,"), which is very
annoying when the "tag" (or whatever it's properly called) is an
integral part of understanding the visuals, as here at
<http://www.slate.com/id/2139195/entry/2139202/>.


WHY OH WHY DO YOU DO THIS, FIREFOX??????

The mousover tags were definitely not meant to hold that much
information. That should be in the captions or somewhere around the
image.

If the tag is an "integral part of understanding the visuals", that is
bad HTML practice; consider telling the webmaster to change it.
 
N

NYC XYZ

Dustan said:
The mousover tags were definitely not meant to hold that much
information. That should be in the captions or somewhere around the
image.

If the tag is an "integral part of understanding the visuals", that is
bad HTML practice; consider telling the webmaster to change it.


You have a point there, but by the same token, the internet was never
meant to be what it is today...so expanding the envelope of what's
possible by utilizing what's available seems to be what our Brave New
World is all about, and considering this, it seems the worse practice,
even given HTML X.x parameters, to inherently (from the get-go) limit
capabilities...the design philosophy should always be: allow the user
to define the scope of information available. (I'm still shaking my
head over Y2K...ironic the lack of foresight, given the foresight
generally needed for computer programming.)

After all, "information wants to be free." =)
 

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