I'm trying to place a Raphael canvas in to a div which is smaller than the actual canvas. So basically I have something like this:
var paper = Raphael("test", 2000, 2000);
var a = paper.rect(0, 0, 2000, 2000).attr({fill: "#000"});
//
<div id="test" style="width: 500px; height: 500px; overflow: auto;"></div>
Seems simple enough? Most browsers have no problem with this but IE7 forces the whole 2000x2000 rectangle on screen ignoring the whole div constraints.
I tried placing the div within another div like so:
<div id="ieholder" style="width: 500px; height: 500px; overflow: auto;">
<div id="test" style="width: 2000px; height:2000px;"></div>
</div>
But no luck, same thing happened. Is there a way around this? This whole thing is already a compromise as I use raphael-zpd to give users zoom and pan functionality but as it doesn't work on IE I thought I'd just give IE users the image with basic pan functionality but no! Damn you IE!
<div id="ieholder" style="width: 500px; height: 500px; overflow: auto;">
<div id="map" style="width: 2132px; height: 2872px;">
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" width="2000" height="2000">
<desc>Created with Raphaël</desc>
<defs>
<rect x="0" y="0" width="2000" height="2000" r="0" rx="0" ry="0" fill="#000000" stroke="#000">
</svg>
</div>
</div>