Create an HTML Invoice: Difference between revisions
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'''The Goal'''<br> | '''The Goal'''<br> | ||
Ever need to create | Ever need to create an HTML printable invoice for your customer with all of those little blocks and lines? And then try to electronically fill the required data in the little spaces? It can be a challenge in Windows, and even more so in HTML. There is an easier way than trying to do it as described above - instead, place your data on top of an image. Essentially it works like this. | ||
'''The Form'''<br> | '''The Form'''<br> | ||
Create an exact size image. For testing you can take a screen shot of | Create an exact size image. For testing you can take a screen shot of your invoice or create a copy of your invoice using Quark or one of the other similar products that are designed for this purpose. Doing it this way provides a much nicer image. Use a PNG file format, it’s more robust than JPG. | ||
A “span” tag is used to group HTML and can also be used to “hook” information onto that HTML. Here we will use it to enforce accurate positioning of the data elements on top of the image. An example will help. | A “span” tag is used to group HTML and can also be used to “hook” information onto that HTML. Here we will use it to enforce accurate positioning of the data elements on top of the image. An example will help. |
Revision as of 14:34, 3 February 2009
The Goal
Ever need to create an HTML printable invoice for your customer with all of those little blocks and lines? And then try to electronically fill the required data in the little spaces? It can be a challenge in Windows, and even more so in HTML. There is an easier way than trying to do it as described above - instead, place your data on top of an image. Essentially it works like this.
The Form
Create an exact size image. For testing you can take a screen shot of your invoice or create a copy of your invoice using Quark or one of the other similar products that are designed for this purpose. Doing it this way provides a much nicer image. Use a PNG file format, it’s more robust than JPG.
A “span” tag is used to group HTML and can also be used to “hook” information onto that HTML. Here we will use it to enforce accurate positioning of the data elements on top of the image. An example will help.
<form> <span id=”rel” style="FLOAT: left; POSITION: relative"> <span id=”abs” style="LEFT: 28px; POSITION: absolute; TOP: 90px" > <td class="Data"><input size="14" name="loadInfo__pu_contact" /></td> </span> <table> <tr> <td> <img src="images/Waybill.png" height="881" width="690" align="left" alt="Waybill.png"> </td> </tr> </table> </span> </form>
Notice the use of both relative and absolute positioning in the span tags. Absolute positioning prints at exactly those coordinates in relation to the top left corner of the browser. The problem with this is that it can be unreliable by itself and can vary depending on the browser being used. And if you have multiple pages, it gets worse.
Relative positioning means that the coordinates are relative to something else. So, the premise is that for each page we need to establish an anchor other than the browser window itself. The id="rel" span serves as the main anchor for the page, the id="abs" tag will always appear in relation to the outer span tag.
In the above case, the coordinates of id=”rel” are relative to the form and the coordinates of id=”abs” are relative to “rel”.
If you want to have multiple pages, simply force a pagebreak after the last span tag (inside the form tags) and add another complete set of html as shown above.