Gav... wrote:
quote who=John Horner
I think the inclusion of the postcodes in the tags is a little clunky,
and not very intuitive.
I've had no direct involvement with the makeover, but I happen to know
the reasoning behind the postcodes. There are a number of different
towns and
Gav... wrote:
quote who=John Horner
I think the inclusion of the postcodes in the tags is a little clunky,
and not very intuitive.
I've had no direct involvement with the makeover, but I happen to know
the reasoning behind the postcodes. There are a number of different
towns and
Hello all!
Who, in your opinion, are the 5 best JavaScript gurus?
This is a question that might seem silly, but there is actually a great
deal of thought behind it. I am working on a paper at university level,
that intends to describe the benefits of unobtrusive DOM-scripting,
compared to
I read a book by Christian Heilmann on beginning javascript, I would rate
him as a guru
Also I would give a shout out to dan webb, also the guy from quirks mode
(Sorry whoever you are)
Both from what I know are big pushers of unobtrusive javascript and more up
to date methodology
Cheers,
Cameron Singe wrote:
I read a book by Christian Heilmann on beginning javascript, I would
rate him as a guru
Definitely. FYI Lars, http://domscripting.com/ is Christian's hub site.
Jeremy Keith should also be above most of these people as popular and
populist (just under PPK, possibly) -
I'd like to add Gez Lemon to the list please.
Kind regards,
Frank
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Barney Carroll
Sent: Tuesday, 19 June, 2007 12:48 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] JavaScript gurus - exercise in
On 19/06/07, Barney Carroll [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Definitely. FYI Lars, http://domscripting.com/ is Christian's hub site.
No, Dom Scripting is the site for Jeremy Keith's book for JavaScript
beginners. Christian's site is http://www.wait-til-i.com/
Jeremy Keith should also be above most
Peter Paul Koch (as suggested)
Dean Edwards (as suggested)
Valerio Proietti: www.mootools.com
James Edwards: www.brothercake.com
On 19 Jun 2007, at 11:43, Keryx Web wrote:
Hello all!
Who, in your opinion, are the 5 best JavaScript gurus?
This is a question that might seem silly, but
Lars
Your problem is going to be to get what are deemed good academic sources.
As you will already know academic publications and conference papers will
carry greater weight than books, especially those not peer reviewed and
published as an academic work.
It's who your tutor / prof is going to
The eGovernment Accessibility Toolkit was created for the Department for
Victorian Communities, Citizen Access and Transformation Division,
Victoria Online in June 2007.
http://www.egov.vic.gov.au/index.php?env=-innews/detail:m1496-1-1-8-s-0:n-31
9-1-0--
It contains the following sections:
-
Hi all,
Just got a 1 pixel gap at the left of my image here that is baffling
me. It is happening in Firefox and Safari on Mac - the only browsers I
have tested in so far. you can see there is space below the image to
the right where it sticks out a bit too.
http://method.com.au/test.html
I
Just got a 1 pixel gap at the left of my image here that is baffling
me. http://method.com.au/test.html
Try reducing 'bgMain.gif' to 709px
Thanks,
Al
***
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http://www.phillipwrayracing.com
XHTML error - img tag has been opened but not closed add alt
attributes to those images.
Other than that nice!
Thanks,
Al
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List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
Thanks Alex, I feel a bit daft for not noticing that myself :)
It seems though, that even though this has fixed that, the problem is
now occuring the other way; So when there is NO content, it displays
fine and when there IS content going below the fold, it shows the 1px
gap on the right now.
Sorry, there seems to be some inconsistencies now, the version on my
localhost is showing the problem I just sent, yet when I put it live
it doesn't occur. Both versions are using the same CSS and HTML...
Anyone seen a problem like that before? It's just static HTML, so I'm
guessing it wouldn't
Umm,
Forget my last post, I hadn't uploaded the image. Doh!
It appears the problem is that the background image width isn't an
even number, causing the alignment to change when the scrolling
occurs, as it can't find exactly 50%, so it adds an extra pixel
Thanks for your help.
Paul
On
Jermayn Parker wrote:
just wondering if people can have a quick look at the following website
for any major errors, suggestions etc
http://www.phillipwrayracing.com
It is a little slow to load. I regret that font-scaling drops the floats
and/or breaks the layout.
Best,
~dL
--
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 17:33:34 +0100, Paul Collins wrote:
Hi all,
Just got a 1 pixel gap at the left of my image here that is baffling me. It is
happening in Firefox and Safari on Mac - the only browsers I have tested in
so far. you
can see there is space below the image to the right where it
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 17:33:34 +0100, Paul Collins wrote:
Hi all,
Just got a 1 pixel gap at the left of my image here that is baffling me. It is
happening in Firefox and Safari on Mac - the only browsers I have tested in
so far. you
can see there is space below the image to the right where it
Hello all,
I downloaded the beta for Safari 3 the other day, it looks nice.
Unfortunately, someone has pointed out a problem with a site I'm
building and they are using version 2.0. I can't replicate the problem
in the new version!!
So after searching Evolt and a few other places, I can't find
On 19 Jun 2007, at 20:39:44, Paul Collins wrote:
I downloaded the beta for Safari 3 the other day, it looks nice.
Unfortunately, someone has pointed out a problem with a site I'm
building and they are using version 2.0. I can't replicate the problem
in the new version!!
So after searching
great, done. I usually throw those things away :)
Cheers for that.
On 19/06/07, Nick Fitzsimons [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 19 Jun 2007, at 20:39:44, Paul Collins wrote:
I downloaded the beta for Safari 3 the other day, it looks nice.
Unfortunately, someone has pointed out a problem with a
On 19/6/07 9:27 PM, Rob Kirton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lars
Your problem is going to be to get what are deemed good academic sources. As
you will already know academic publications and conference papers will carry
greater weight than books, especially those not peer reviewed and published
On Jun 20, 2007, at 5:20 AM, Nick Fitzsimons wrote:
PS - on OS X, of course.
The beta download comes with an uninstall package to roll you back
to your previous version of Safari. It's on the Safari3Beta.dmg you
originally installed from.
You can use the nightly WebKit builds to check
I'm new to this group, and I'm not sure if it's okay to post a question, but
here it is:
I've designed a website and am now creating the CSS for the home page. This
is the CSS for my main container div:
#container {
width: 760px;
background-color: #00;
We need to see more of your code or a link to your page but I suspect your
container probably contains floated content and you haven't cleared your
floats properly.
I have to ask though, if your image is just creating black borders on
either side of the container, why don't you use borders
Joyce Evans wrote:
I’m new to this group, and I’m not sure if it’s okay to post a
question, but here it is:
I’ve designed a website and am now creating the CSS for the home
page. This is the CSS for my main container div:
#container {
width: 760px;
Hi Jermayn, I notice the left and right columns white background
colors (or image) are overlapping the 'g-background.jpg'.
You either need to may transparent color for left/right column or if
background images are used, use nee to make them narrower or maybe
add z-index properties.
Here is the link to the incomplete home page. It's as far as I have gotten
with the CSS. The CSS file name is brookgrooves_home.css, and it is an
external style sheet, which you'll be able to download.
http://www.nichemktghouston.com/bookgrooves/index.html
Notice that the dark lines appear to
It's as I said before. Your layout contains floated content and you
haven't cleared your floats. Adding overflow: hidden to #container will
make the borders appear in Firefox but you should do some reading up on
'clearing floats'.
On Wed, 20 Jun 2007 10:35:50 +1000, Joyce Evans
[EMAIL
Thank you to all who responded. I added overflow: hidden; to #container,
as suggested by John Faulds below, and I now see the background image in
Firefox, as well as IE.
I obviously have much reading/learning to do.
Thank you.
Joyce
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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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