![]() There the little extra blank line space doesn't interfere really significantly. So, I moved the JS code down to immediately below the masthead and main navigation bar, and immediately before button tags and the page body content's container div. I re-read the Facebook instructions for inserting the Like button code, and I saw that actually they said that the Javascript code would "ideally" be immediately following the tag - in other words it didn't actually *have to* be in that specific position. So nowadays for safety I prefer to avoid anything having invisibility attributes of any kind.Īnyway, I was able to improve the situation and get rid of the blank line above my pages' masthead. What I'd actually done was to add a hidden spambot trap link on each page. Im able to compensate for that where the button code itself goes, though I dont know for sure that it wont cause malfunction of the button display on some. However, I won't try invisibility because I got my fingers burnt some years ago, when one site of mine lost ALL its human traffic over about half a year, apparently because of search engines heavily penalizing it for what they 'saw' as unethical SEO practice. Like always, if you have any comments or you think that something. I just tried the comment option, and that causes the buttons to disappear - as also does putting a tiny transparent gif image between the open and close tags - so it looks as though I have to stay with. Add a comment 23 Answers Sorted by: 95 Google Docs can serve up PowerPoint (and PDF) documents in its document viewer. Two major open source Web editors made releases in recent weeks: Bluefish and BlueGriffon. Many thanks, Greg, for those seriously useful suggestions. I'd so much appreciate something being done about this! The real answer, undoubtedly, is to stop BG deleting empty tags, at least without the user having requested that action. I'm able to compensate for that where the button code itself goes, though I don't know for sure that it won't cause malfunction of the button display on some browsers (Facebook aren't exactly forthcoming in giving such information), but there is another empty div with an ID, which has to be placed immediately above the piece of Javascript, immediately below the tag, and this is causing a blank line above the masthead of each page, and I most certainly don't want that, and I don't know a way of closing up that blank line. ![]() However, that causes an additional blank line in the displayed page. Now, I've sought to get round this by putting a non-breaking space between the opening and closing tags. It is based on Gecko, the rendering engine inside Firefox, and uses XULRunner, the runtime environment for Gecko. For example, the FB 'Like' button code (apart from the connected Javascript bit) that I'm using is: The problem appears to be the deleting of *any* empty tags - and my problem is now that I've put Facebook buttons on my many pages, and BG deletes them because they are seen as empty tags. This issue is still with us in the current BG version, and it is now a major headache for me, making me really want to jettison BG, except that detailed searches have failed to find a workable alternative for my purposes.
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