When I look at the text under the pictures, there's arbitrary breaks, so it's not a complete paragraph.Fonkay wrote:What's a line break?Luci wrote:remove the line breaks that don't need to be there.
When you hover your mouse pointer over something, and then a box appears with some text in it to describe that something. They're most common on toolbars. In my firefox browser, if I hover over, say, the refresh button, I get a little box that says "Reload current page". That's a tooltip. They annoy me, but they've become standard practice in applications. When you set a title attribute for an image in an html document, your browser is supposed to render it as a tooltip. IE will do it with alt text, which it's *not* supposed to do.What's a tooltip?
It's what you're wanting to do.Is that refering to my site? or others? And if it's mine, where are these crazy extra boxes?Luci wrote:Web Pet Peeve #1232524123: Extra boxes that appear only when I hover over things.

You have to ask yourself the age-old question, "I can do that, but should I?"
I'm with you on popups, mostly. But there are occasions when they are actually a good idea, and what you're wanting is such an occasion, if you absolutely refuse to just put the text on the page with the paintings. It's useful if you make it a small box that's clearly a dialog, make it appear only when the user clicks on it and *never* automatically, strip out all the browser stuff (the toolbar, urlbar, etc), and include a link to close the window. Then it's a dialog, and it makes sense.
I'm a big fan of gallery pages that have captions to explain the picture. I also like what MediaWiki does, where it shows the picture scaled to a certain size to fit on the page, and then you can click on the picture to see the raw image--in the same window. The same layout can have caption at the bottom describing the picture (and on Wikipedia you'll see some license information on each one) or saying whatever it is you wnted to say about it.
On my own site, for music, I just put a Download link. So it was song title on a line, then the download link, then the paragraph talking about the song. The same thing would work for you, with the difference being that people expect at least a thumbnail when the content is image-oriented.
Hmmm, if I haven't started making sense yet then you probably need someone else to help you.
