Site Helper (SH) is a tool for helping typesetters, as well as a good tool for communication, the layout designer, programmer, manager, as well as the manager client, “without departing from the site” imperceptibly for ordinary users in real time.
Probably, everyone who at least opened a pixel to a pixel under each browser faced a situation when something was going, the heights of the width of the blocks do not match ... the situation is familiar.
PixelPerfect or layout markup on js or SH can save here;)
Another very common situation is when a customer or a tester found a bug and cannot clearly understand where he is. Well, or the customer decided to add a block of banners and also could not clearly explain what and where.
Then you can not read and immediately see this demo, well, or so, and without a site, the site looks exactly like google.com ;)
Testers have very strongly flooded it was decided to disable the demo.You can use your colors by changing the color = # FCC and rcolor = red
in the anchor')
SH allows you to add notes and rulers to any html page (so far only), which greatly simplifies understanding and explaining the problem and helps to solve it. It is written on jQuery, weighs little, the server part is in PHP, all data is merged into a database (MySQL).
What else needs to be done:
- If you go to full screen mode (the document size will increase), the vertical rulers will be shorter than necessary
- When horizontal scrolling horizontal rulers do not mix
- When you change the resolution, if the markup is floating, everything becomes not where it should be
- Replace text in the menu with icons
- Bind to html elements (and) instead of x, y | left, top
- STOP flood
You can download it
here (rar, 45.5 Kb).
Criticism and suggestions are welcome.PS Tulsa is made simply and without unnecessary frills. Vosnovnom I write under Prototype;)
PS Please do not flood rulers. I'm already afraid to leave a demo for the night)
PS Flood goes off with a bang - no need to check! (the tool is ultimately intended for a limited circle of cultural developers, and not for general use)