Attributes for <FRAMESET ...>
FRAMEBORDER = YES | 1 | NO | 0
FRAMESPACING = integer
BORDER = integer
The issue of what goes in between the frames is determined (somewhat confusingly) with
FRAMEBORDER,
FRAMESPACING, and
BORDER.
There are two separate issues:
To set the frames so there are no borders at all see
"No Borders".
FRAMEBORDER determines if there should be 3-D borders between the frames. YES, which is the default, says there should be borders. 1 is the same as YES.
NO says there should not be 3-D borders. Unfortunately, the name "FRAMEBORDER" is deceptive. With NO there are not cool 3-D borders, but there is still
the default background color (usually gray or white) between the frames:
For example:
| this code |
produces this |
<FRAMESET ROWS="20%,*" FRAMEBORDER=NO>
|
this page
|
To control how much space is between the frames (that is, how big are the borders) use
FRAMESPACING and
BORDER.
These are actually the same attribute; it's just that MSIE only understands
FRAMESPACING and Netscape only understands BORDER. Use both to be safe:
| this code |
produces this |
<FRAMESET ROWS="20%,*" FRAMESPACING=30 BORDER=30>
|
this page with some unusual frame borders
|
The most common use of
FRAMEBORDER,
FRAMESPACING, and
BORDER is to create a page with no space between the borders. To do this, set
NO,
FRAMESPACING, and
BORDER:
| this code |
produces this |
<FRAMESET ROWS="20%,*" FRAMEBORDER=NO FRAMESPACING=0 BORDER=0>
|
this page |
Copyright 1997-2002 Idocs Inc. Content in this guide is offered freely to the public under the terms of
the Open Content License and the Open Publication License.
Contents may be redistributed or republished freely under these terms so long as credit to the original creator and
contributors is maintained.
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