C
Cire
Can anyone please help with what is a very aggravating problem and I am sure
quite easy to solve, when you know how! The program I am using is FP2000.
I am constructing a page of some thirty pictures but most of the thumbnails
are blocked out by a solid patch of black except for a narrow band at the
top of each picture, when in NORMAL mode. however, when I go to PREVIEW mode
the pictures are perfect.
When I first enter the pictures and the thumbnails they are perfect but,
after closing down the program and returning to that page, they are blacked
out (but OK in Preview mode).
I doesn't prevent me from working, of course, but is very frustrating and
time wasting dodging between the two pages, plus you lose a sense of what
you are doing.
Strangely, the occasional picture seems to escape this problem but when I
check the HTML I can find absolutely no difference in the coding between the
'good' ones and the 'bad'. I have tried varying the way I enter my pictures
but no matter how I do it the problem still persists.
Your help would be gratefully appreciated.
Eric
quite easy to solve, when you know how! The program I am using is FP2000.
I am constructing a page of some thirty pictures but most of the thumbnails
are blocked out by a solid patch of black except for a narrow band at the
top of each picture, when in NORMAL mode. however, when I go to PREVIEW mode
the pictures are perfect.
When I first enter the pictures and the thumbnails they are perfect but,
after closing down the program and returning to that page, they are blacked
out (but OK in Preview mode).
I doesn't prevent me from working, of course, but is very frustrating and
time wasting dodging between the two pages, plus you lose a sense of what
you are doing.
Strangely, the occasional picture seems to escape this problem but when I
check the HTML I can find absolutely no difference in the coding between the
'good' ones and the 'bad'. I have tried varying the way I enter my pictures
but no matter how I do it the problem still persists.
Your help would be gratefully appreciated.
Eric