'."\n"; $output .= ''."\n"; $output .= "\n"; $output .= ''. $title ."\n"; // Note on CSS files from Benjamin Shell: // Stylesheets are a problem with image assist. Image assist works great as a // TinyMCE plugin, so I want it to LOOK like a TinyMCE plugin. However, it's // not always a TinyMCE plugin, so then it should like a themed Drupal page. // Advanced users will be able to customize everything, even TinyMCE, so I'm // more concerned about everyone else. TinyMCE looks great out-of-the-box so I // want image assist to look great as well. My solution to this problem is as // follows: // If this image assist window was loaded from TinyMCE, then include the // TinyMCE popups_css file (configurable with the initialization string on the // page that loaded TinyMCE). Otherwise, load drupal.css and the theme's // styles. This still leaves out sites that allow users to use the TinyMCE // plugin AND the Add Image link (visibility of this link is now a setting). // However, on my site I turned off the text link since I use TinyMCE. I think // it would confuse users to have an Add Images link AND a button on the // TinyMCE toolbar. // // Further note from Steven Jones: // Safari won't let us just load up stylesheets from javascript, we actually // need to do that in another thread. So we must surround our calls to add the // CSS with nasty setTimeout calls, even if they're just for 1ms. // // Note that in both cases the img_assist.css file is loaded last. This // provides a way to make style changes to img_assist independently of how it // was loaded. $output .= drupal_get_html_head(); $output .= drupal_get_js(); $output .= "\n\n"; // Ensure that img_assist.js is imported last. $path = drupal_get_path('module', 'img_assist') .'/img_assist_popup.css'; $output .= "\n"; $output .= "\n"; $output .= '\n"; $output .= theme_status_messages(); $output .= "\n"; $output .= $content; $output .= "\n"; $output .= ''; $output .= ''; return $output; }