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  3. Nice work Chris!

Nice work Chris!

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  • A Andrew Peace

    Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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    Carlos Antollini
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    Hey Chris!!!! CLAP!!!, CLAP!!!, CLAP!!!, CLAP!!! Very Nice. :) Carlos Antollini.

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    • D Dhandapani Ammasai

      It's pretty cool and I liked it. Chris, may be you can publish an article on how to do the sliding side bar! --------------- Dan Ammasai ---------------

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      Farhan Noor Qureshi
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      You can see Dynamic Drive and 24Fun with many examples of browser specific and cross-browser DHTML goodies. BTW: CP's sliding navigation bar does not work in Netscape. Anyway, nice work, Chris! Farhan Noor Qureshi

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      • A Andrew Peace

        Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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        Jon Sagara
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Yes, no kidding. It's damn sexy! Jon Sagara

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        • F Farhan Noor Qureshi

          You can see Dynamic Drive and 24Fun with many examples of browser specific and cross-browser DHTML goodies. BTW: CP's sliding navigation bar does not work in Netscape. Anyway, nice work, Chris! Farhan Noor Qureshi

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          Christian Graus
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Yeah, but what the hell does work in Netscape ? I fought for them in the browser wars, and they rolled over & died. Goes to show what skill I have picking the winning team... Wait a minute - can anyone recommend a book on C# ?? :) Christian #include "std_disclaimer.h" People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. The things that come to those who wait are usually the things left by those who got there first.

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          • A Andrew Peace

            Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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            Chris Maunder
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            That ol' thing? :-O Glad you like it! cheers, Chris Maunder

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            • A Andrew Peace

              Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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              Jim A Johnson
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Sorry to rain on everyone's parade, but this thing, while maybe technically interesting, is _really_ annoying. It's precisely the kind of valueless UI gimmick that adds nothing to the usability of the product, decreases reliability (since it brings in more code), and distracts the user from the task at hand. Thumbs down.

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              • C Christian Graus

                Yeah, but what the hell does work in Netscape ? I fought for them in the browser wars, and they rolled over & died. Goes to show what skill I have picking the winning team... Wait a minute - can anyone recommend a book on C# ?? :) Christian #include "std_disclaimer.h" People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. The things that come to those who wait are usually the things left by those who got there first.

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                David Cunningham
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Hey Christian, You picked CodeProject didn't you :) Your luck can't be all bad. D

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                • D David Cunningham

                  Hey Christian, You picked CodeProject didn't you :) Your luck can't be all bad. D

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                  Christian Graus
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  I picked CodeGuru first, and what a disaster that was. Their whole login system was, and is, totally screwed. But you're right - I got there in the end. Plus I chose C++ instead of VB, Hungry Jacks over McDonalds, guitar over piano accordion, my wife over those other chicks that were around at the time....... Christian #include "std_disclaimer.h" People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. The things that come to those who wait are usually the things left by those who got there first.

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                  • J Jim A Johnson

                    Sorry to rain on everyone's parade, but this thing, while maybe technically interesting, is _really_ annoying. It's precisely the kind of valueless UI gimmick that adds nothing to the usability of the product, decreases reliability (since it brings in more code), and distracts the user from the task at hand. Thumbs down.

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                    CodeGuy
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    Hm, Jim, many software products are successful because they are "gimmicks". Off the top of my head, wallpaper for Windows, skinnable apps, and the Winamp Visualizer come to mind. However, these things are cool because either a) they let the user personalize the interface or b) the behavior is fun (Winamp and Chris's sidebar fall in this category). If all UI work was utilitarian in nature, we'd still be using the Windows 3.1 interface. Bleah!

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                    • A Andrew Peace

                      Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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                      Alvaro Mendez
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      I agree, it's pretty cool. :) It's curious that just yesterday I saw this kind of thing for the first time on another website. Microsoft's Zone.com (yes I'm still playing games) had a regular-looking-rectangular banner ad that when you put the cursor over it expanded down to cover almost the whole screen space below it. It was pretty impacting... and it works just like CodeProject's: when the mouse is removed, it goes back to it's regular size. I found it pretty innovative, albeit a bit annoying for something like a banner ad. This one is nice though. Nice work! Alvaro

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                      • J Jim A Johnson

                        Sorry to rain on everyone's parade, but this thing, while maybe technically interesting, is _really_ annoying. It's precisely the kind of valueless UI gimmick that adds nothing to the usability of the product, decreases reliability (since it brings in more code), and distracts the user from the task at hand. Thumbs down.

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                        Chris Maunder
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        Thanks for the comments Jim. I added it because I was sick and tired of trying to navigate from an article to the main sections via the homepage or section Table of Contents. I designed it so that it was slim and out of the way, and I was actually wondering if people would even notice it (as I said, it's kind of a quiet test). Is it really getting in the way that much? I could add a timer that waits for a 1-2 second hover before it moves over. Just let me know how many bugs you want with that extra piece of code :D Other options are that I could just trash it, or move to a fixed menu, or have a setting in your Settings page that allows you to disable it. Lemme know. cheers, Chris Maunder

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                        • C Chris Maunder

                          Thanks for the comments Jim. I added it because I was sick and tired of trying to navigate from an article to the main sections via the homepage or section Table of Contents. I designed it so that it was slim and out of the way, and I was actually wondering if people would even notice it (as I said, it's kind of a quiet test). Is it really getting in the way that much? I could add a timer that waits for a 1-2 second hover before it moves over. Just let me know how many bugs you want with that extra piece of code :D Other options are that I could just trash it, or move to a fixed menu, or have a setting in your Settings page that allows you to disable it. Lemme know. cheers, Chris Maunder

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                          Jim A Johnson
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          Glad you apprecieate the comments. UI designers tend to agree that soething occuring just because you move your mouse - without actually doing something overt to initate an action, such as clicking - is a Bad Thing. Tool tips are an exception to this, because they are small and unobtrusive, though. Were this my app, I'd drop it. Since some people seem to like it, you should probably just allow it to be turned off in the settings. One thing I'm curious about, though: I have animation turned off on my machine, so that menus pop up immediately, etc. When I tried to use AnimateWindow(), however, nothing heppened - indicating that this function respects that setting. However, I've noticed that a few apps - IM, and this sidebar of yours - animate regardless of that setting. How does that work?

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                          • J Jim A Johnson

                            Glad you apprecieate the comments. UI designers tend to agree that soething occuring just because you move your mouse - without actually doing something overt to initate an action, such as clicking - is a Bad Thing. Tool tips are an exception to this, because they are small and unobtrusive, though. Were this my app, I'd drop it. Since some people seem to like it, you should probably just allow it to be turned off in the settings. One thing I'm curious about, though: I have animation turned off on my machine, so that menus pop up immediately, etc. When I tried to use AnimateWindow(), however, nothing heppened - indicating that this function respects that setting. However, I've noticed that a few apps - IM, and this sidebar of yours - animate regardless of that setting. How does that work?

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                            Michael Dunn
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            However, I've noticed that a few apps - IM, and this sidebar of yours - animate regardless of that setting. How does that work? I haven't looked at the sidebar code, but I imagine it's the IE equivalent of a Netscape LAYER that's originally off-screen, and gets moved 1 pixel at a time to produce the sliding effect. With MSN IM, those notification windows look totally owner-drawn (but they don't stay up long enough for me to spy on them with Spy++! ;) ), so the app can draw it however it likes. It could check the system setting and not animate its windows, it just doesn't. --Mike-- http://home.inreach.com/mdunn/ #include "buffy_sig"

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                            • C Chris Maunder

                              That ol' thing? :-O Glad you like it! cheers, Chris Maunder

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                              RaviBee
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              Oi, I think it's very cool! But it would be cooler :-) if I could enable/disable it from my prefs. Thx, Chris! /ravi "There is always one more bug..." http://www.ravib.com ravib@ravib.com

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                              • F Farhan Noor Qureshi

                                You can see Dynamic Drive and 24Fun with many examples of browser specific and cross-browser DHTML goodies. BTW: CP's sliding navigation bar does not work in Netscape. Anyway, nice work, Chris! Farhan Noor Qureshi

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                                Slavo Furman
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                Another very good site, if you need cross-browser DHTML stuff, is SiteExperts. SlavoF "I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand." --Confucius

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                                • J Jim A Johnson

                                  Glad you apprecieate the comments. UI designers tend to agree that soething occuring just because you move your mouse - without actually doing something overt to initate an action, such as clicking - is a Bad Thing. Tool tips are an exception to this, because they are small and unobtrusive, though. Were this my app, I'd drop it. Since some people seem to like it, you should probably just allow it to be turned off in the settings. One thing I'm curious about, though: I have animation turned off on my machine, so that menus pop up immediately, etc. When I tried to use AnimateWindow(), however, nothing heppened - indicating that this function respects that setting. However, I've noticed that a few apps - IM, and this sidebar of yours - animate regardless of that setting. How does that work?

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                                  Chris Maunder
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  Hey Jim, The sidebar is just a floating table that's moved using javascript. I'll work on the toolbar when I need some light relief and see what I can come up with :) cheers, Chris Maunder

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                                  • A Andrew Peace

                                    Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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                                    F Braem
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    I like it also, but there's one problem. When you need to scroll down in the menu, you have to leave the menu, and use the scrollbar of the browser. The problem is that you can't see how far you need to scroll, because the menu is disappeared. I don't know how you can solve that.

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                                    • A Andrew Peace

                                      Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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                                      David Saulnier
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      I've got my fonts at 150% and the scroll bar when minimized is covering the the left side of the article so I can't read the first few characters of each line. Also I find that it takes too long for the scrollbar to slide away on a 850Mhz P3. The rate used to expand is nice, why not retract at the same rate? I tried locking it and it jumped back to retracted in the locked position. Otherwise I like the idea. On the subject of larger font sizes this edit field I'm typing in is 125% as wide as the screen which makes it kind of hard to use.

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                                      • F Farhan Noor Qureshi

                                        You can see Dynamic Drive and 24Fun with many examples of browser specific and cross-browser DHTML goodies. BTW: CP's sliding navigation bar does not work in Netscape. Anyway, nice work, Chris! Farhan Noor Qureshi

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                                        Daniel Ferguson
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        What is "Netscape?" ;) "das leid schlaft in der maschine" -Einstürzende Neubauten

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                                        • A Andrew Peace

                                          Hey, Just thought I drop a note to say how cool your sliding sidebar is! Nice work! > Andrew.

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                                          Chris Meech
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          If you run with Large Fonts, it causes the bar to cover over part of the text of the page. In addition to this, try scrolling down so that the bottom of the sidebar is eventually exposed. When you mouse over from the side, the bar exposes itself :) and will close up when you mouse away, again over the side. But if you mouse away by moving the mouse down through the bottom of the side bar, it does not closeup at all. In fact it stays completely open, covering the document as you scroll up back to the top. I definitely like the idea of having this as a preference setting. But it is very cool and usefull for the site. Chris

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