FutureFantasyDesign opened this issue on Oct 04, 2009 · 50 posts
auntietk posted Tue, 06 October 2009 at 9:11 AM
I don't know if pasting a URL will be helpful, Stacey ... please bear with me ... I hope I can make this clear:
If I go to a gallery and click on an image on the first page of that gallery, everything is normal. As soon as I click over to the next page *of the gallery *(via clicking another page number in the top or bottom right-hand corner) and open an image, there are no comments showing on any of the images. The stats will say "17 comments" (or whatever) but the comment body says "there are no comments yet" and indeed, I see no comments! If I post a comment, I can all of a sudden see all the previous comments on that image. If I close the image and open it again, all the comments (including the one I just left) don't show up.
If I go to a member's gallery who has more than one page of images, the same thing happens. No comments on anything but the images on the first page of their gallery, no matter how many comments it says there are.
Okay ... if I click on an image on the first page of a gallery, I see comments. If I click next next next (the new feature you've installed) until I'm on the second page of the gallery, having flipped through a few images, the comments continue to be there. If I click on an image on the second (or third, or 15th) page of a gallery, and open an image and it doesn't show the comments, clicking next next next brings up the next images, but they, too, show no comments.
I don't think URLs will tell you what you need to know in order to see this problem. Just go to the first page of a gallery (any gallery) and then click over via a page number and open an image on a later gallery page, and you should see what's happening.
If that doesn't make enough sense to help you see the problem, please let me know ... I'll be happy to make another attempt at clarity.
I hope the techs can figure this out, because it's driving me crazy!!!
Thanks!
"If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough." ... Robert Capa