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The Alpha Software Forum Participation Guidelines

The Alpha Software Forum is a free forum created for Alpha Software Developer Community to ask for help, exchange ideas, and share solutions. Alpha Software strives to create an environment where all members of the community can feel safe to participate. In order to ensure the Alpha Software Forum is a place where all feel welcome, forum participants are expected to behave as follows:
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Community members are encouraged to click the "Report Post" icon in the lower left of a given post if they feel the post is in violation of the rules. This will alert the Moderators to take a look.

Alpha Software Corporation may amend the guidelines from time to time and may also vary the procedures it sets out where appropriate in a particular case. Your agreement to comply with the guidelines will be deemed agreement to any changes to it.



Bonus TIPS for Successful Posting

Try a Search First
It is highly recommended that a Search be done on your topic before posting, as many questions have been answered in prior posts. As with any search engine, the shorter the search term, the more "hits" will be returned, but the more specific the search term is, the greater the relevance of those "hits". Searching for "table" might well return every message on the board while "tablesum" would greatly restrict the number of messages returned.

When you do post
First, make sure you are posting your question in the correct forum. For example, if you post an issue regarding Desktop applications on the Mobile & Browser Applications board , not only will your question not be seen by the appropriate audience, it may also be removed or relocated.

The more detail you provide about your problem or question, the more likely someone is to understand your request and be able to help. A sample database with a minimum of records (and its support files, zipped together) will make it much easier to diagnose issues with your application. Screen shots of error messages are especially helpful.

When explaining how to reproduce your problem, please be as detailed as possible. Describe every step, click-by-click and keypress-by-keypress. Otherwise when others try to duplicate your problem, they may do something slightly different and end up with different results.

A note about attachments
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If you forgot to attach your files to your post, please do NOT create a new thread. Instead, reply to your original message and attach the file there.

When attaching screen shots, it is best to attach an image file (.BMP, .JPG, .GIF, .PNG, etc.) or a zip file of several images, as opposed to a Word document containing the screen shots. Because Word documents are prone to viruses, many message board users will not open your Word file, therefore limiting their ability to help you.

Similarly, if you are uploading a zipped archive, you should simply create a .ZIP file and not a self-extracting .EXE as many users will not run your EXE file.
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Design Issue, Width of Grids/Controls

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    Design Issue, Width of Grids/Controls

    Hi,
    For Presentation purposes I would like to have almost all my controls, Dialogs, Grids, and Toolbars Render with a universal width.
    My current method is to manually create white space with all the controls to obtain similar widths, (FYI normally 690px).
    Is there an easier way of achieving this as my present method is tedious.
    Thx

    #2
    Re: Design Issue, Width of Grids/Controls

    Because of how Alpha builds grids, the best way is to make an entry on the Table Tag Attributes property for grids and dialogs, such as "width=650px". I don't know what you mean by toolbars; navigation components? I fake the width of a nav bar by creating a solid background behind the nav the width of my main table.
    Steve Wood
    See my profile on IADN

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      #3
      Re: Design Issue, Width of Grids/Controls

      I fake the width of a nav bar by creating a solid background behind the nav the width of my main table.
      -
      Now that's a trick I had not thought of.
      I think I'll make use of that. :-)

      Unfortunately I believe that your Ron Cooper Quote in your sig is probably correct and I'm needlessly spending hours attempting to be pixel perfect.
      -
      FYI - as far as width goes I do find any web page where horizontal scrolling to be acceptable by users to be an appalling choice. Similar but not so disgraceful is where a page has everything cluttered hard to the left hand margin.

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Design Issue, Width of Grids/Controls

        I take the comment by Ron Cooper to heart. Sometimes I have to fight clients from having me fill their pages with unnecessary detail. Help Text, Continue Buttons, Return to First Page Buttons, different colors to mean different things. There are ways to do that unobtrusively, but Ron's comment is about allowing users to find the least path of resistance within your [web] software application.

        I'm working on a web app redo for one client where they have sixty (60) hyperlinks on their existing home page; thirty of them repeated on every page. I forget where I read this study, but the more choices you present to a user, the less likely they are to choose any of them.

        Another favorite quote related to Ron's comment and about web page content, but taken antithetically, is a yell by a Deep Purple fan - "Make everything louder than everything else!"
        Steve Wood
        See my profile on IADN

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Design Issue, Width of Grids/Controls

          I'm working on a web app redo for one client where they have sixty (60) hyperlinks on their existing home page; thirty of them repeated on every page. I forget where I read this study, but the more choices you present to a user, the less likely they are to choose any of them.
          Agreed, the minimilastic approach has proved to work well on the web,
          For example the original "Google" home page, which provided users with a search text box and a big chunk of branding before leading users to a google sized results page.
          -
          In sales I learned eons ago to always offer purchasers with 3 choices, never 2, never 4, but always 3. I guess 2 makes them feel too bound into making a choice, and 4 choices confuses them.

          I still try to put 3 [decision] type menus, or buttons in any application I design.

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