Summary
Dynamic positioning of content brings the browser much closer to the goal of providing the same flexibility and aesthetics as a page layout program, but also provides the advantage of separating positioning information from content.
Items on a page can be absolutely or relatively positioned, and their sizes, padding, margins, and borders can be controlled in order to place them precisely. The use of CSS properties can also provide
scripting capabilities, in which positioning information can be controlled programmatically in response to user actions.
8 of 10 |
Previous |
Next
Comments
Back to top
Help: Update or add to My dW interests
What's this?
This little timesaver lets you update your My developerWorks profile with just one click! The general subject of this content (AIX and UNIX, Information Management, Lotus, Rational, Tivoli, WebSphere, Java, Linux, Open source, SOA and Web services, Web development, or XML) will be added to the interests section of your profile, if it's not there already. You only need to be logged in to My developerWorks.
And what's the point of adding your interests to your profile? That's how you find other users with the same interests as yours, and see what they're reading and contributing to the community. Your interests also help us recommend relevant developerWorks content to you.
View your My developerWorks profile
Return from help
static.content.url=http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/js/artrating/
SITE_ID=1
Zone=Web development
ArticleID=136427
TutorialTitle=Understanding dynamic positioning
publish-date=11132001
author1-email=
author1-email-cc=