Without an iOS device I have no chance to experiment a little bit. The only advice at the moment would be to create your iframe content as separate pages of a conventional website. That way you would...
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Without an iOS device I have no chance to experiment a little bit. The only advice at the moment would be to create your iframe content as separate pages of a conventional website. That way you would...
To check if the solution of the linked stackoverflow issue works you could simply add the style information to your iframes and check if it fixes the problem. For example change
<iframe...
This is only speculating, but maybe your additional media CSS confuses the iOS browser?
<style>
@media screen and (min-width: 1200px) {#xr_xr {top:0px;}}
@media screen and (min-width:...
I don't have an iOS device to check on and try to find a workaround. Maybe Egg can help?
I'm afraid you will need to create a separate slider with a matching page size for each IFRAME if nothing...
Happy to hear that. :)
In the link properties select "Parent frame" for the "Open link" option.
Yes, just go ahead. Supersites with scale to fit option still allow to have variants.
Edit: But in that case you would not need the scale to fit option anymore I guess.
As the slider document is created as a supersite it is easy to have it auto stretching (see "Scale To Fit Screen" in the Web export options). Just checked it.
Unfortunately there seems to be a bug...
Maybe this example is what you have in mind. Just something recycled from another thread, so please excuse the text only supersite.
Please also note that this example won't work when started...
Hi Acorn,
one of those is where the idea is taken from. I mentioned that when I first posted such a slideshow in this post.
So there should not be a big difference I think.
Nice tutorial Egg!
May I add a small information?
The code line
sDispTimes=[4]; can be extended to define display times for each individual slide/page. If you have three pages for example:...