Ascroll is usually partitioned into pages, which are sometimes separate sheets of papyrus or parchment glued together at the edges. Scrolls may be marked divisions of a continuous roll of writing material. The scroll is usually unrolled so that one page is exposed at a time, for writing or reading, with the remaining pages rolled and stowed to the left and right of the visible page. Text is written in lines from the top to the bottom of the page. Depending on the language, the letters may be written left to right, right to left, or alternating in direction (boustrophedon).
Scrolls were the first form of editable record keeping texts, used in Eastern Mediterranean ancient Egyptian civilizations. Parchment scrolls were used by the Israelites among others before the codex or bound book with parchment pages was invented by the Romans, which became popular around the 1st century AD.[2] Scrolls were more highly regarded than codices until well into Roman times.
Shorter pieces of parchment or paper are called rolls or rotuli, although usage of the term by modern historians varies with periods. Historians of the classical period tend to use roll instead of scroll. Rolls may still be many meters or feet long, and were used in the medieval and Early Modern period in Europe and various West Asian cultures for manuscript administrative documents intended for various uses, including accounting, rent-rolls, legal agreements, and inventories. A distinction that sometimes applies is that the lines of writing in rotuli run across the width of the roll (that is to say, are parallel with any unrolled portion) rather than along the length, divided into page-like sections. Rolls may be wider than most scrolls, up to perhaps 60 cm or two feet wide. Rolls were often stored together in a special cupboard on shelves.
In Scotland, the term scrow was used from about the 13th to the 17th centuries for scroll, writing, or documents in list or schedule form. There existed an office of Clerk of the Scrow (Rotulorum Clericus) meaning the Clerk of the Rolls or Clerk of the Register.[4]
Eventually, the folds were cut into sheets, or "leaves", and bound together along one edge. The bound pages were protected by stiff covers, usually of wood enclosed with leather. Codex is Latin for a "block of wood": the Latin liber, the root of "library", and the German Buch, the source of "book", both refer to wood. The codex was not only easier to handle than the scroll, but it also fit conveniently on library shelves. The spine generally held the book's title, facing out, affording easier organization of the collection. The surface on which the ink was applied was kept flat, not subjected to weakening by the repeated bending and unbending that scrolls undergo as they are alternately rolled up for storage and unrolled for reading, which creates physical stresses in both the papyrus and the ink of scrolls.
From the fourth century on, the codex became the standard format for books, and scrolls were no longer generally used. After the contents of a parchment scroll were copied in codex format, the scroll was seldom preserved. The majority that did survive were found by archaeologists in burial pits and in the buried trash of forgotten communities.[7]
Modern technology may be able to assist in reading ancient scrolls. In January 2015, computer software may be making progress in reading 2,000-year-old Herculaneum scrolls, computer scientists report. After working for more than 10 years on unlocking the contents of damaged Herculaneum scrolls, researchers may be able to progress towards reading the scrolls, which cannot be physically opened.[8]
Need on scrolling interaction, up and down instead of drag on #prototyping, so i can present the exact micro interaction for show and hide top navigation bar between each card on onboarding screen or like search input while i scroll the page down on iphone native app, vice versa.
I would also add that interactions such as scroll to view, ie when scrolling something into view, it animates. Like when you get to a section and you want the section to animate in a way when user get to it, once.
I can see there was discussion that this was a system wide problem that has evidently been fixed. It has not been fixed for me. I can't reply on the dropbox solution, and nothing allows me to scroll from picture to picture. I literally have to look at a picture then hit the return arrow to go back to my entire folder of photos, select another picture, look at it, and then go back again to the main folder to get yet another photo. I pay for premium dropbox and am seriously considering finding a different way to store my photos - this is crazy. Having to download the photos onto my computer so I can scroll from photo to photo completely negates the reason I signed up for Dropbox!
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Going from pic to pic in slide show view works fine, but I can't scroll down a folder page of image thumbnails to find a photo. I can only see the first 15 thumbs. I'm using Firefox on a windows machine, all in good working order
All I get is the picture and no way of going to next photo. I can enlarge but that is all. Don't want to deleat and re-install as I have it on 4 machines and I think I am correct in saying that you can only have 3 now.
If you're choosing the "expand preview" option, when you hover your cursor over the image in the preview you should have a small black bar along the bottom that shows the "" arrows and the zooming options.
The following examples show how to use the scroll event with an event listener and with the onscroll event handler property. The setTimeout() method is used to throttle the event handler because scroll events can fire at a high rate. For additional examples that use requestAnimationFrame(), see the Document scroll event page.
\n The following examples show how to use the scroll event with an event listener and with the onscroll event handler property.\n The setTimeout() method is used to throttle the event handler because scroll events can fire at a high rate.\n For additional examples that use requestAnimationFrame(), see the Document scroll event page.\n
We have several google "chrome base" desktops, (just like a chrome book laptop, only a desktop).....while working from with in the chrome web browser, on the chrome base, we are not able to use the horizontal scroll in the grid view. We have to resort to selecting a cell, and using the arrow key to move horizontally. By the way, this is a new problem, this worked just fine about 2 months ago.
So, what I am finding is that this is a smartsheet issue. In our company, 6 of our 19 people use chrome bases, or a chrome book, and none of them can use the horizontal scroll in any sheet. This makes the gant chart really hard to use. This used to work just fine, but now it does not. We also use google spreadsheets, and the horizontal scroll work just fine. Can you folks look into this? I have attached a screen shot...Thank you!
I think the problem came up when they added the last icon to the right panel. There are 10 icons there now (at least for me). We would not have this problem if we have 9 icons at most, or even better, if we could hide/show that panel.
Since the browser cannot show all icons, it creates a higher page that requires to scroll down to see the horizontal scrollbar. If we could remove one single icon from that panel the problem would be solved.
I opened a support ticket, but I can't close this pop-up no matter what I click or what browser I use and I'm wondering if anyone has any insight. I'm LOCKED OUT of my work because of some stupid UI refresh alert. ?
Step 1: On a button or element, make a workflow and choose the page you want to go to, it could be the same page if you prefer. Add the parameter, something like the example, I choose Scroll. Add a value, for mine, I chose Yes.
Make sure you have a condition on each of the workflows that checks which group you want it to go to. For example, if you want to scroll to Group1 on the page, send Group1 as the value to the new page. If you want it to scroll to Group2 on the page, send Group2 as the value to the new page.
1. Ctrl+Scrollwheel is a common gesture for zooming among other programs, at least among Microsoft programs. So this is the natural gesture to a new programmer or those who did not already know the structure scroll shortcut. The same is true for Ctrl+= and Ctrl+- (zoom in and zoom out respectively). In LabVIEW, they used to be to change font sizes. Those are now Ctrl+> and Ctrl+
2. No, you cannot get the old way back. You can adjust your muscle memory. We all have with other things. I'm of the opinion that there are too many environment options already. Let's not add more for things like this.
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