![]() ![]() ♦ Hurricanes and the War of 1812: Documents on Selected Storms Affecting Naval Operations ♦ General Orders USS Independence 1815 Naval Historical Foundation publication ♦ Documents, Official and Unofficial, Relating to the Case of the Capture and Destruction of the Frigate Philadelphia at Tripoli on the 16th February, 1804 ♦ The Defense and Burning of Washington in 1814: Naval Documents of the War of 1812 ♦ The Decatur House and Its Distinguished Occupants ♦ Constitution Sailors in the Battle of Lake Erie ♦ Condition of the Navy and Its Expenses Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 25, 1821 ♦ Capture of the Frigate Philadelphia, 31 October 1803: Selected Naval Documents ♦ Battle of Tripoli Harbor, 3 August 1804: Selected Naval Documents ♦ Battle of Lake Erie: Building the Fleet in the Wilderness by RADM Denys W. ♦ Battle of Derna, 27 April 1805: Selected Naval Documents ♦ Submarine Turtle: Naval Documents of the Revolutionary War Placed on the Books of the Navy, According to the British Regulations. ♦ A Short Account of the Several General Duties of Officers, of Ships of War From an Admiral, Down to the Most Inferior Officer. ♦ Rules for the Regulation of the Navy of the United Colonies of North-America ![]() ![]() ♦Resolution of the Continental Congress establishing the Marine Corps - 10 November 1775 The Navy Discover Its Professional Roots ♦ Pivot Upon Which Everything Turned: French Naval Superiority That Ensured Victory At Yorktown ♦ Narrative of Joshua Davis, an American Citizen, Who Was Pressed and Served on Board Six Ships of the British Navy. ♦ John Paul Jones by James Fenimore Cooper ♦ Establishment of the Navy, 13 October 1775 ♦ Establishment of the Department of the Navy, 30 April 1798 ![]() ♦ Dropped charges and grievances against one John Paul Jones Whitehaven England ♦ The Continental Navy: "I Have Not Yet Begun to Fight" ♦ Captain Samuel Nicholson: A Monograph by J. Specify container: 'body' in Dropdown's config.♦ Battle of the Nile, Narrative, Rear-Admiral Sir Horatio Nelson, 1798 Side note: perhaps I'm too demanding but, by comparison with prior versions, I find Bootstrap 5 difficult to work with and poorly documented, at least at this point in time. I've smoke tested it in both latest Vue 2 ( 2.7.10) and latest Vue 3 ( 3.2.40). The solution seems to work in all cases, including inside 3d transformed ancestors. It might not be necessary, but to me it makes a lot of sense. Additionally, I'm moving the menu back to its original place in DOM once the dropdown is closed. uses TripleN's idea to append the menu to, after Popper positioned it.uses Nikola's idea to give the menu position: fixed, so Popper does the heavy lifting of positioning.If someone knows how to achieve this in Bootstrap 5 without having to meddle with DOM ourselves, I'd be delighted to learn how.Įventually I gave up and ended up moving the menu in DOM myself, after Popper positions it: I've spent hours going through Bootstrap 5's and Popper's documentation and examples, trying to find a way to do this simple task: specify a target container for popper content. This particular task used to be easy in prior versions of Bootstrap. append the popper content to while dropdown is open.allow Popper (used internally by Bootstrap 5) to position the dropdown (the popper content) correctly,.In my estimation, the correct solution would be to do both: dropdown has any valid transform value other than none ( spec ref). dropdown-menu to, so it stops working as soon as one of the ancestors of. TripleN's answer doesn't position the dropdown correctly.I find both existing answers valuable, but neither complete: ![]()
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