﻿
div.scrollingHotSpotLeft
{
	/* The hotspots have a minimum width of 100 pixels and if there is room the will grow
    and occupy 15% of the scrollable area (30% combined). Adjust it to your own taste. */
	min-width: 75px;
	width: 10%;
	height: 100%;
	/* There is a big background image and it's used to solve some problems I experienced
    in Internet Explorer 6. */
	background-image: url(../images/big_transparent.gif);
	background-repeat: repeat;
	background-position: center center;
	position: absolute;
	z-index: 200;
	left: 0;
	/*  The first url is for Firefox and other browsers, the second is for Internet Explorer */
	cursor: url(../images/cursors/cursor_arrow_left.png), url(../images/cursors/cursor_arrow_left.cur),w-resize;
}

div.scrollingHotSpotLeftVisible
{
	background-image:url(../images/arrow_left.gif);				
	background-color:rgba(0,0,0,.7);
	background-repeat:no-repeat;
	*opacity:0.35;
	*-moz-opacity:0.35;
	*filter:alpha(opacity = 35);
	zoom: 1; /* Trigger "hasLayout" in Internet Explorer 6 or older versions */
}

div.scrollingHotSpotRight
{
	min-width: 75px;
	width: 10%;
	height: 100%;
	background-image: url(../images/big_transparent.gif);
	background-repeat: repeat;
	background-position: center center;
	position: absolute;
	z-index: 200;
	right: 0;
	cursor: url(../images/cursors/cursor_arrow_right.png), url(../images/cursors/cursor_arrow_right.cur),e-resize;
}

div.scrollingHotSpotRightVisible
{
	background-image:url(../images/arrow_right.gif);
	background-color:rgba(0,0,0,.7);
	background-repeat:no-repeat;
	*opacity:0.35;
	*filter:alpha(opacity = 35);
	*-moz-opacity:0.35;
	zoom: 1;
}

/*
The scroll wrapper is always the same width and height as the containing element (div).
Overflow is hidden because you don't want to show all of the scrollable area.
*/
div.scrollWrapper
{
	position: relative;
	overflow: hidden;
	width: 100%;
	height: 100%;
}

div.scrollableArea
{
	position: relative;
	width: auto;
	height: 100%;
}
