We are now using "fade" links if you didn't notice that already. It won't show in Netscape, and is available on the start page, and in the Ocean forum theme. Let me know if you want me to add any other "pointless" features as well.
"Stephen Wolfram is the creator of Mathematica and is widely regarded as the most important innovator in scientific and technical computing today." - Stephen Wolfram
Posted 2002-03-13, 07:47 PM
in reply to Chruser's post "Effects"
heres something totally unimportant and probably not a good idea because of mem/time, but maybe if u could make the buttons pop up sort of, like depressible buttons
i think that would be really cool because it always annoys me when i click on something and all that comes up is the dotted box around it-just a thought, but not a very good one
Posted 2002-03-14, 12:18 AM
in reply to Chruser's post "Effects"
Erm, dotted box? Nothing really happens here, but what you're basically asking for would be a mouse-over effect for some buttons?
"Stephen Wolfram is the creator of Mathematica and is widely regarded as the most important innovator in scientific and technical computing today." - Stephen Wolfram
Posted 2002-03-14, 11:54 PM
in reply to Chruser's post "Effects"
That "press your mouse" effect is usually flash effects. Gif's usually just have a normal and a mouse-over effect, but I guess that might be doable, even if it would take some work.
"Stephen Wolfram is the creator of Mathematica and is widely regarded as the most important innovator in scientific and technical computing today." - Stephen Wolfram
Posted 2002-03-15, 04:22 PM
in reply to Chruser's post "Effects"
It would take some work to get that done, since vbulletin seems to read with php modifiers (like $buttondir=images/ocean), so it won't just grab a single image, but read the button names from a list, and then let you set the dir name for where they are. In short, doing a mouse-over effect for that might be slightly difficult.
"Stephen Wolfram is the creator of Mathematica and is widely regarded as the most important innovator in scientific and technical computing today." - Stephen Wolfram