Chris Jean
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Archive for September 2009

Fix width:auto Floated Elements in IE 6

by Chris Jean
September 30th, 2009

It is popular to use ul and li elements float them and set them to width:auto in CSS in order to create a horizontal list of self-sizing boxes. These can easily be used to create horizontal navigation or a listing of tabs, and it works very well. However, there is one caveat; given the right mix of CSS this solution doesn’t work properly in IE 6.

To create this scenario, we can simply use something like the following:

<style type="text/css">
    ul {
        height: 30px;
        overflow: hidden;
    }
    ul li {
        float: left;
        width: auto;
    }
    ul li a {
        display: block;
        height: 30px;
    }
</style>
<ul>
    <li><a href="#">Link 1</a></li>
    <li><a href="#">Link 2</a></li>
</ul>

This will show the problem in IE 6 nicely. The problem is that IE 6 interprets this mix of CSS and decides that each li element should actually expand out to 100% width.

I’ll explain how to fix this issue and provide and example page so you can easily play around with the HTML and CSS yourself.

Read More→

Categories Development, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (6)

Completed the One Outs Anime Series

by Chris Jean
September 28th, 2009

I finished watching the One Outs anime series today. I’m neither a sports fan nor a sports anime fan, yet One Outs really won me over.

One Outs is a sports genre anime about a pitcher named Tokuchi Toua. He was found and recruited to the Saikyou Saitama Lycaons by Japanese batting legend Kojima Hiromichi and is not your standard pitcher. Discovered during a game of One Outs, a betting game that pits a pitcher against a batter in a battle of wits, Tokuchi mixes his gambling proficiency, his ability to intimidate and read other players, and his strategic expertise to bring the Lycaons out of their long slump.

My personal interest in this show is how Tokuchi is extremely-creative in how he manipulates everything and everyone to his advantage. This starts when he gets his team’s owner to agree to a contract where Tokuchi is paid 5 million Yen for every player he gets out while he pays a penalty of 50 million Yen for every player that he allows to gain a run. The owner believes that the contract will result in Tokuchi paying him millions of Yen each game, but he is quickly frustrated when Tokuchi sends him a bill of 110 million Yen after the first game he pitches in.

There are currently 25 episodes, which is just half of the story at best. From the series’ Wiki page, I found One Outs was originally a manga running in Business Jump from 1998 through 2006, so there should be plenty of material for many seasons of the show. However, at this time, I have yet to find any confirmation of additional seasons. I’d really like to see them run this series at least one additional season as the story really deserves it.

The music is really bland in this series. Also, the animation isn’t anything special. Neither of these are reasons to watch the show. This show is all about the characters and story, both of which are top-notch.

While I don’t think that this show is for everyone, if you are an anime fan that likes stories involving strategy and tactics, then I highly recommend One Outs.

Categories Anime
Comments (1)

Vertically Centering HTML Content via CSS

by Chris Jean
September 27th, 2009

Today I  have yet another entry on HTML and CSS. Today it is how to vertically center content in HTML using CSS.

You’d think that there would be a standard definition of how to vertically center any content by now, but there isn’t. There are a variety of methods out there that do this. I frequently see people using the line-height CSS property to vertically center content. While this appears to work, it isn’t very flexible, only works properly if there is only one line of text, and doesn’t work in all situations.

I found Yuhu’s Definitive Solution with Unknown Height which looks great, works properly with all major browsers, doesn’t have the limitations I’ve seen in other solutions, and is quite simple to implement. Basically all you have to do is have three divs wrapped around the content you wish to vertically center and use specific styling for those divs.

The following code is what does the magic. Replace the comment with the content to be vertically centered, change the height to match the vertical height of the container, and you’re set.

<div style="display:table; height:400px; #position:relative;">
    <div style="#position:absolute; #top:50%; display:table-cell;
vertical-align:middle;">
        <div style="#position:relative; #top:-50%">
            <!-- content to be centered -->
        </div>
    </div>
</div>

I built a quick example document that shows how I applied the rules via a style block in the head to keep the HTML clean.

As with my taming HTML lists fix, I tested this successfully on the following browsers:

  • OS X
    • Firefox 3.5
    • Safari 4
  • Ubuntu (Linux)
    • Firefox 3.5
    • Google Chrome 4
    • Konqueror 4.2
    • Midori 0.1.2
    • Opera 10
  • Windows
    • Firefox 3.5
    • Google Chrome 4
    • Internet Explorer 6, 7, and 8
    • Safari 4

Thank you Yuhu for the great solution.

Categories Development, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (0)

man Pages for C Development in Ubuntu

by Chris Jean
September 26th, 2009

I recently tutored a friend in C coding. Since I hadn’t worked with C in at least 8 years, I really needed to have some references to rely on for syntax and other specifics. Fortunately, there are some easy man pages that can be installed in Ubuntu that offer helpful information that I was able to use to help refresh my memory.

These man pages are easily installed by installing the manpages-dev package. You can install this package via Synaptic or directly on the command line. I like the command line method personally, so I ran sudo apt-get install manpages-dev from the command line to quickly install the package.

After installing the package, I’m able to access man pages for functions such as printf, opendir, and putc. For each function, it shows the valid syntax as well as what library is required to make use of the function.

The information isn’t limited to functions as you can also access information on the libraries, such as stdio or string.

To access any of this information, simply run man [function or library name] such as man stdio.

This package isn’t limited to C functions/libraries. It is a general use Linux development suite of man pages. For a full list of what is installed, check out the file list.

Categories Development, Linux, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (0)

Pushing a Webpage Footer to the Bottom of an HTML Page with CSS

by Chris Jean
September 25th, 2009

Anyone that works with HTML and CSS will tell you that positioning things exactly where you want them to be is often times difficult. If you want to position something somewhere vertically, it becomes even worse.

I just finished working on a theme where I needed to force the footer of the layout to the very bottom of the page. While logically putting the footer after all the other content is easy, making it sit at the very bottom of the page even when the content doesn’t take up enough space to push it down there is quite difficult.

After struggling with getting this right for a couple of hours, I finally found a site that has done all the hard work for me. CSS Sticky Footer is the site that saved my sanity.

CSS Sticky Footer provides a solution that sticks the footer to the bottom of the page in a cross-browser compliant manner. The site reports, and I can confirm, that it works with Internet Explorer 6 through Internet Explorer 8,  Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, Opera, and Konqueror.

Since the implementation could change, I recommend that you visit the site to get details; however, just in case something happens to the site, I’m going to add the solution here as well.

Read More→

Categories Development, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (0)

Taming HTML Lists Across All Browsers

by Chris Jean
September 24th, 2009

It seems that every browser rendering engine has a completely different way of rendering lists. I recently had the frustrating job of getting them all to play nicely together.

The CSS I ended up using is quite simple and works across all the browsers I tested (list at the bottom).

This is the magic bit of CSS:

ul, ol {
    list-style-position: outside;
    margin: 0 0 0 15px;
    padding: 0;
}
ol {
    margin-left: 20px;
    *margin-left: 24px; /* targeted IE 6, 7 fix */
}
li {
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
}

This CSS forces all the browsers to play by the same rules. The end results are nice and clean.

The left margins are necessary to get all the browsers to not clip part of the bullet/number; however, you can change this left margin on ul/ol elements contained within the primary ul/ol if you need to adjust the indentation of each sub-list.

Each browser that I tested rendered the same thing, albeit with slightly different bullets or padding in front of the number.

The following are the browsers I tested:

  • OS X

    • Firefox 3.5
    • Safari 4
  • Ubuntu (Linux)

    • Firefox 3.5
    • Google Chrome 4
    • Konqueror 4.2
    • Midori 0.1.2
    • Opera 10
  • Windows

    • Firefox 3.5
    • Google Chrome 4
    • Internet Explorer 6, 7, and 8
    • Safari 4
Categories Development, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (2)

Fixed the Contact Form… Again

by Chris Jean
September 17th, 2009

I just found out that yet again, my contact form failed. I’m using the cforms II plugin, and it seems to fail all too often. I wonder if I should either 1) code up my own solution or 2) use something else.

I think my primary problem is that they release patches all the time and the patches are not easy to install since they are not on the WordPress.org Plugin Repository.

Here’s a hint to the guys at delicious:days: add your code to the plugin repository so that it is as easy to update as most of the other plugins. It’s already a open-source, GPL plugin. I don’t understand why it hasn’t been there for a long time by now.

So, if you sent me a contact message and I haven’t replied to you, I probably never got one. I’m sorry for that.

Categories Uncategorized
Comments (2)

Recursively Updating Git Submodules

by Chris Jean
September 16th, 2009

I had fun writing about how I work with Git yesterday. I thought I’d continue on that thread.

I have a solid set of code libraries that I’ve written that latch into the WordPress themes we produce at iThemes. Each time code is duplicated across different repositories, I break that code out and make it into a separate repository. I then link it back into the project as a submodule. This makes it extremely-easy to keep duplicated code across numerous repositories updated with little or no fuss.

After cloning a repository, simply run git submodule init followed by git submodule update in order to initialize all the submodules and update their container folder with the content of the submodule’s repository. For a long time, this is exactly what I did when I would clone a theme repository to start working on it. However, this quickly wasn’t enough.

The problem happened as soon as I added a submodule to a repository that was also a submodule of other repositories. Doing the submodule init and update process wouldn’t do everything I needed in this case as there would be submodules in some subfolder that haven’t been set up.

I didn’t want to get into a habit of always switching to other directories and doing the submodule processes there as well since I 1) knew that I would forget all-too-often, thus wasting my time, and 2) knew that this would not be the last time that a submodule had submodules. Heck, there is even the possibility that I’ll have a submodule that has a submodule that has a submodule. It was immediately clear that I needed a script to do all this dirty work for me. The rest of this post will be about the script I created.

Read More→

Categories Development, Linux, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (14)

Updating Multiple Git Repositories Easily Using Bash for Loop

by Chris Jean
September 15th, 2009

All of the WordPress themes that I work on for iThemes are managed as Git repositories. Recently, we moved past the 100 repositories mark. That’s a lot of repositories to manage, and unfortunately, too many of those repositories contain duplicated information.

Later on, I might delve into how we use Git to manage our theme repos. For today, however, I’d like to focus on how I quickly and easily pushed up changes to more than a dozen repos in a single, albeit long, Bash command.

I had finished making updates to 16 Flexx repos, and I needed to push all of those changes up. Since I had multiple working repos in that folder, I was lucky that each of these repos began with the text “Flexx”. Also, since they are all part of the same series and need to keep the same version number, that simplified the tagging as all could be tagged as 2.5.0.

Given this information, I simply ran the following command from the directory that contained all the repository directories:

for i in `ls|grep Flexx`; do echo “— Pushing $i”; cd $i; git commit -am ’2.5.0′ && git push && git tag 2.5.0 && git push –tags; cd ..; echo “— Finished $i”; done

There’s a lot going on here, so I’ll break it up and explain what I’m doing.

Read More→

Categories Development, Linux, Tips 'n Tricks
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Fix “The URL is not valid and cannot be loaded” in Firefox on Ubuntu

by Chris Jean
September 9th, 2009

In Linux, clicking the middle mouse button (or mouse wheel) pastes the most recently highlighted text from any application. This is useful; however, it has an extremely-annoying side-effect in Firefox. Whenever I middle-click outside of entry fields, I get an annoying pop-up that says: “The URL is not valid and cannot be loaded.” This frustrates me to no end. It usually happens when I accidentally nudge my mouse and miss middle-clicking a link in order to open it in a new tab.

So, why is it doing this? Turns out that, by default, Firefox for Linux allows you to use this middle-click to paste functionality to allow you to navigate to a highlighted URL simply by middle-clicking non-editable portions of the page. When an invalid URL is the result of the paste, the annoying popup appears.

Today, I found out how to get rid of this annoyance.

Open a new tab in Firefox and navigate to “about:config”. This will take you to an interface that allows you to tweak and configure very specific functionality of Firefox.

In the “Filter:” text box, enter “middlemouse.contentLoadURL”. This should present a single entry that lists the option as having a value of “true”. Simply double-click the listing to change the value to “false”. The effect is instantaneous.

Now when you middle-click outside of editable areas in Firefox, it will no longer try to navigate to a URL. This change only modifies the navigation to URL functionality; the middle-click to paste in editable areas still functions.

If you like the middle-click to scroll functionality found in other browsers/operating systems, then search for “general.autoScroll” and double-click the listing to change it to true. Now you can middle-click to initiate scrolling.

Categories Linux, Tips 'n Tricks
Comments (26)
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