Roundcube Community Forum
Miscellaneous => Roundcube Discussion => Topic started by: kfordham281 on July 11, 2006, 04:07:12 PM
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I've uploaded BlueTabby to my skins directory but I can't seem to find out how to enable it. Help please. I searched the wiki but didn't find anything. Thanks.
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change this line in main.inc.php in your config folder after placing the BlueTabby folder in the Skins folder... atleast until they build in a theme switcher ;)
// relative path to the skin folder
$rcmail_config['skin_path'] = 'skins/default/';
to
// relative path to the skin folder
$rcmail_config['skin_path'] = 'skins/BlueTabby/';
thanks for checking out BlueTabby by the way :)
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I even looked in there and didn't see it! I did a "find" on theme but it's labeled as skin.
Thanks!
BlueTabby looks good!
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I even looked in there and didn't see it! I did a "find" on theme but it's labeled as skin.
Thanks!
BlueTabby looks good!
Are you sure? The value is definetly in main.inc.php.
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Premade skins are available for RoundCube or i have to make it myself ?
I like to have a skin like gmail, i don't like default skin as it load mail in frame. Gmail do not do that way.
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How do you mean it loads the mail in a frame?
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I think he means it loads the mail in an iframe.
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it doesn't load the mail in an iframe though.....
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My I ask how the scrolling functionality works? I have seen javascript implemented scrolling objects but never one that scrolled as smoothly as a normal browser frame...
In any case, it still acts like a frame.
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It's not an Iframe. It's not even anything close to a frame. It's a Div element with a max-height of XX pixels (or em for lines) height and when there is overflow (text going over the max-height) it adds the scroll bars automatically.
You can test this out yourself:
<div style="width: 75px; height: 20px; max-height: 10em; overflow: auto; padding: 2px;">
<p style="width: 71px;">This is some content<br />
that flows past the maximum height<br />
of our content div.<br /><br />
When content expands below the<br />
div, a scrollbar is automatically added<br />
and it looks like a frame, but is really<br />
some good CSS 2 styling.<br /><br />
lorem ipsum dolor sit amet<br />
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz<br />
now I know my abc's, next time<br />
won't you sing with me ;)<br />
End of lesson.</p>
</div>
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I see. I did not realize that overflow could be controlled that way. :)
But it still *acts* like a frame when the scroll bars are added. And I believe that is what the above user was getting at. Not what the code is but how it looks and acts.
Now that I understand how the CSS works the above post should only need to remove the height restrictions (and probably play with other items to keep the "Select: All Unread None Disk usage:" correct) to get the effect he was looking for.
On a side note, is there a plan for a developers guide or anything of that sort?
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There will be documentation, but that is later... right now we need a functional email client ;)