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Issue 92 of
Bug Tracker for COREBlog
[COREBlog Bugs]
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Title: |
IMG tag fails alignment in Body text
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Status: |
Pending
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Security |
related:
No
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Description: |
If you embed an IMG tag inside the Body of an entry then no matter what align="" string you use it will always align to the left of any of the text.
...
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From: |
Sliver
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on: |
Jan 4, 05 07:30
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Sliver
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Last update:
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May 5, 05 18:15
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Topic/class: |
COREBlog/bug
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Importance:
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medium
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Version info: |
COREBlog __version__='$Revision: 1.5 $'[11:-2]
Zope 2.7.3
Firefox 1.0, IE 6.00.29 |
Issue 92 Transcript
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3 entries
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= Comment - Entry #3 by Anonymous User on May 5, 2005 6:15 pm
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= Comment - Entry #2 by betabug on Jan 28, 2005 8:00 am
Maybe this is because the setting in the CSS Style Sheet overrides your setting the alignment in the HTML code. Locate the lines:
<pre>
.entry img {
float: left;
margin: 0 1em 1em 0;
}
</pre>
in style_css, and there you remove the line with "float: left;". Works for me.
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= Request - Entry #1 by Sliver on Jan 4, 2005 7:30 am
If you embed an IMG tag inside the Body of an entry then no matter what align="" string you use it will always align to the left of any of the text.
For instance...
<p>Last night we went to see the St Petersburgs Ballet in The Sleeping Beauty. When we arrived we found that they'd extended the orchestra pit into the first two rows so our row C seats were actually in the first row and right behind the conductor. It's an entirely different kind of experience being on the front row, you're involved in tiny dramas that the majority of the audience never know about; the furious gestures of the conductor as the horns become too brassy; the weariness in the musicians, laying down their instruments and almost collapsing after their part is done but immediately picking them up and starting on cue.<img src="http://www.grandtheatre.co.uk/St-Petersburg.jpg" alt="" align="right" style="margin : 25px;">
<p>It was a good performance all in all, certainly very classical and the corp de ballet were very accomplished. The Prince seemed unequal to the task of steadying the ballerina as she spun and a couple of times she seemed irritated by him (though this could be part of the dance, I don't know it that well). It's fairly well known that Disney butchered the music for its own ends in creating its animated version and my favourite part of the whole score is the Cat Duet, which in the Ballet is in the post wake up Act where a lot of other nursery rhyme characters come along and do their party piece, including Puss in Boots.</p>
The image will be aligned to the left of the second paragraph rather than to the right.
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