forum.coppermine-gallery.net

Support => cpg1.3.x Support => Older/other versions => cpg1.3 Miscellaneous => Topic started by: martijn01 on November 22, 2005, 01:02:09 pm

Title: not random or last added but a fixed image
Post by: martijn01 on November 22, 2005, 01:02:09 pm
with cpmfetch i only read about random or lastadded images

i want to link to a image from my index page ex: http://www.wakeskating.nl/cpg135/displayimage.php?album=14&pos=0

but if a new image is added the link to the original image will chanche to ...........pos=1

if you ad an album this does not happen!

i know its got something to do with sortorders date title..... but it would make linking to the album a lot easier if the link to an image (displayed in the album, not to the file) did not change

or is there a link which is not visable? or is there another solution?

Title: Re: not random or last added but a fixed image
Post by: Nibbler on November 22, 2005, 06:55:36 pm
Use the link provided in the pic info section (eg. displayimage.php?pos=-123). That's what it is designed for, it will never change.
Title: Re: not random or last added but a fixed image
Post by: martijn01 on November 24, 2005, 09:33:05 am
thanx, how could i think that nobody thought about that already!!

other question (haven't looked in the forum yet):

the size of the font is smaller with Fire Fox. Why? + Can it be altered without increasing the size of the other pages (only the size of coppermine is too small)?
Title: Re: not random or last added but a fixed image
Post by: Joachim Müller on November 24, 2005, 07:46:41 pm
we have a "one question per thread" policy that you agreed to respect when signing up - in the future, please do so.

To understand the different browser rendering engines, user settings and the different aspects of pixel-perfect font-sizes, I'd have to come up with an article of more than 10,000 words. This has been explained much better elsewhere on the internet. To make a long story short: forget pixel-perfect site layouts, they don't work, and it's not the way the www is suppossed to work to have pixel-perfect layouts. This is something website designers have been looking to accomplish, and all who created non-trivial sites have failed.