Forum Discussion
Looking fwd to this feature becoming real for those who arent savvy with html.
I use the inspect tool alot to create my own custom table layouts that have inserted images etc, but I'm a bit wary of continuing to do so because if they change the framework in a future update, what will it do to the custom content I've created (in all our 100s of elearns). So, I'm refraining from doing as much custom html coding as I normally will, just in case..
- PhilFoss4 months agoCommunity Member
Mata, here's the best way I've found to add inline images in a course. The method described by Wilfred above is temporary and will break eventually because it creates an external reference, your stakeholders will not appreciate that. In this example I use an image of a math equation, securely stored within the Rise course itself.
- MataHenry-1476e4 months agoCommunity Member
I have Rise course that I save the images into, and copy the urls, then paste into the new course. It gets around that issue of lost images. Sort of using as a online space to store imgs.
I follow/do everything else thats pretty basic, applying the css in inspector etc.
HOpe they add this kind of thing to the road map soon - although I am very familiar with css and html, many of my colleagues arent. Looking fwd to seeing this feature live for their sake.- PhilFoss4 months agoCommunity Member
If you are copying urls, you need to stop asap and revisit all courses where you've done this, those urls will stop working if they haven't already. Using data URI is the only sustainable way to insert an inline image with your text or in a table cell, in Rise 360.