From: Jeff Beal (jeff.beal@ansys.com)
Date: Tue Sep 23 2003 - 10:39:26 PDT
This requires the automatic table layout algorithm, and XEP does not yet
support that. The best you can do is use a fixed width for the first two
columns and use proportional-column-width(1) for the third column, but the
fixed width has to be pre-determined at author time.
Jeff
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Louis Meigret [mailto:meigret@technologist.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2003 12:51 PM
> To: xep-support@renderx.com
> Subject: [xep-support] Fixed column width without knowing the
> width of a
> column
>
>
> Hello,
>
>
> I was wondering whether it was possible to control the size
> allocated to a column without specifying either a fixed
> column size or a relative total size but rather how much
> should be allocated of the table width once the minimum size
> of a column has been calculated.
>
> For instance, I would like two columns to be as wide as their
> minimum size (the longest word or image for instance in the
> column) and the third column of the table to stretch to take
> all the remaining space.
>
> Thanks
>
> LM
>
> --
> __________________________________________________________
> Sign-up for your own personalized E-mail at Mail.com
> http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup
>
> CareerBuilder.com has over 400,000 jobs. Be smarter about
> your job search
> http://corp.mail.com/careers
>
> -------------------
> (*) To unsubscribe, send a message with words 'unsubscribe
> xep-support'
> in the body of the message to majordomo@renderx.com from the address
> you are subscribed from.
> (*) By using the Service, you expressly agree to these Terms
> of Service http://www.renderx.com/tos.html
>
>
-------------------
(*) To unsubscribe, send a message with words 'unsubscribe xep-support'
in the body of the message to majordomo@renderx.com from the address
you are subscribed from.
(*) By using the Service, you expressly agree to these Terms of Service http://www.renderx.com/tos.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Tue Sep 23 2003 - 10:40:20 PDT