Ralph, gmail is working for me. Are you using the *left* mouse button? :-) On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 6:53 PM, Timothy Lee <timothy.ty.lee at gmail.com> wrote: > Dear Marcus, > > On 11/29/2010 07:43 PM, Marcus Moeller wrote: >> Dear Ralph. >>> On Fri, Nov 26, 2010 at 3:09 PM, Ralph Angenendt >>> <ralph.angenendt at gmail.com> wrote: >>>> On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 2:40 AM, Timothy Lee<timothy.ty.lee at gmail.com> wrote: >>>>> I now realize that CentOS have customized the Modern theme quite a bit. >>>>> Please find attached a patch against CentOS' screen.css. The CSS >>>>> declarations for ".navibar" and "#langbar" are now shared to ease future >>>>> maintenance. The broken top menu should also be fixed. >>>>> >>>>> The patch was made against >>>>> http://wiki.centos.org/wiki/modern-CentOS/css/screen.css >>>> If I resize the window to be smaller than 1200 pixels in width, it now >>>> messes up the langbar by "pushing down" the leftmost button. Obviously >>>> this only happens when you actively select a page and that then shows >>>> up on the right hand of the navigation bar. >>>> >>>> I'd rather have a bit more vertical space between navibar and langbar, >>>> so this cannot happen. >> Do you think it could be possible to use a pulldown bar for language >> selection like in: >> >> http://wiki.centos.org/ArtWork/Style/Web/Default >> >> Maybe we could also adopt this css to Mantis, but I never hacked a >> Mantis theme before. Could you perhaps send me the one that is >> currently used, so I can take a look at the structure? > Generating the options for the pull-down list should be quite easy -- > just changing a few lines in the code. The down side is that those > links would not be picked up by search engines. You must also use > either javascript or server-side logic to do the page redirection. If the "This wiki in ..." line towards the bottom is to replicate the langbar (or pulldown bar), then that *would* be picked up by search engines, correct? Also, could the two be sync'd up? Meaning, have the same languages, in the same order, with the same look. Per the latter, the en and de pages display a text description, while the es page uses two-letter code, and es has horizontal lines bordering it (which I like), whereas en and de are plain. jerry