I have a report with two pages. Both have a footer but with different objects. The footer on the second page would have bigger height because of additional objects. Unfortunately, the first page would get a footer with extra height that messes up pagination. Any tricks to solve that?
Thanks
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On my site http://math.byu.edu
I've been trying to make it responsive to screen size but I noticed a problem when I resize the broawser while on the page. If I shrink and enlarge the browser multiple times the min-height is dynamically getting set to a huge number and I end up with a lot of whitespace.
I've searched my php templates and my css and I can't find anythign that owuld be causing this min-height issue. Does anyone have any ideas?
As per the comments, just comment out the line positionFooter() from the $(window).resize() function.
The reason this theme has this script is to make sure the footer doesn't float into the middle of the page assuming the page has zero content. When the page has zero content, there's nothing to push the footer down. So that script is supposed to keep the footer at the bottom of the page, though it does it poorly.
For future reference, if you need a sticky footer (as it's called), I suggest using Ryan Faits Sticky Footer. Just wrap the content in a main wrapper, make sure the footer is a sibling of the main wrapper then use the supplied CSS to make it work.
I'm working on a SSRS report which has different formats for the first page and the overflow pages. The first page has a large footer that shouldn't be displayed on the overflow pages. I'm hiding it using an expression on current page number but it still occupies space. The body on overflow pages does not span the whole page and leaves a large blank space at the bottom. Is there any way to solve this?
Thanks in advance,
Sumit
There is not a good way to hide that empty space(As far I know. I did lot of research when I stuck with this issue.).But if you are showing footer only on the first page then add the footer content on the report content part and then set it's visibility depending on the page number. That way you are showing the footer content on first page only. And if you are repeating that page footer on last page that also works depending on condition and it doesn't occupy the empty space on the page.
I have made a change to a Subreport on SSRS. The subreport should display on the last page of the whole report.
However when running this report as a PDF, a blank page is generated on every alternate page.
The margins and page size have not changed.
What is most likely happening is that part of your report is too wide, and the extra space is printing on the second page. It's usually the report body (it can change as you add columns to your tables) - I would check that first. Just look at the properties and make sure the width isn't wider than what will print on your page.
If you're having trouble identifying which section the extra width is coming from, try changing the background colors on the header, body and footer sections. Set each of them to a different color, then print the report to pdf. You’ll see the colors in the pdf and be able to identify which one is too wide.
Also, make sure you add the margins into your total width as well. If you have .5" margins and can only print 8.5" wide, then your report can't be wider than 7.5"
I am using reporting services 2012 and want to display a group of elements at the bottom of the last page.
I have tried putting this in the footer and hiding the elements for all but the last page, however this doesn't work very well as there is a large blank space at the bottom of all of the preceding pages.
If there was a way of aligning the elements to the bottom of a page that would work, but I cant see any way of doing that. If there was a way to push the elements to the bottom of the page using a rectangle that has a dynamic height, that would also work, but I also cannot find a way of doing that.
Any suggestions?
Unfortunately, page headers and footers must be one constant size in SSRS. That is why you are getting all of that whitespace, and as far as I know, there is no workaround for this.
However, what you can do is page break at the end of your main table / report. Then have another table display the elements you want. Make this second table the height of a full page and put the elements at the bottom. Go into the Tablix Properties and check "Keep together on one page if possible".
If the second table doesn't work, try a subreport.
If you want to have the footer on the same page as the last page of data, this doesn't work. The only way I know of to do that is a major hack: check how many rows come back from the database and calculate how much space they will need to display. Then at the end calculate how big of a rectangle you need to make in between your main table and your second table to push it to the bottom of the page.
I'm trying to have a sticky footer on my page but with a twist compared to what I've seen before.
The top of the footer as to always be sticky at 50px after the content and a green color as to fill the rest of the footer until the end of the page.
You can see an example on http://enviro2012.tapagecommunication.com
The problem is even better illustrate if you clicl on the "send" button in the Facebook plugin at the bottom of the page.
Let me know if you need more info! :)
Thanks!
I've had this one before. I tried all sorts of methods, including checking the window height against the vertical position of the footer, then setting the footer height to the difference. It didn't work too badly across most browsers.
However, the most simple (and fast-rendering) solution was to add enough bottom padding to the footer to cover the gap on most window sizes. Assuming your content is always going to fill the majority of the page, a few hundred pixels should be more than enough – and renders properly the first time the page loads.