check your sites in browsercam.com

On 9/27/06, Tom Kitta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I find IE and FF differ on standards interpretation. There is no design that
> will display the same on all browsers since browsers are give the freedom of
> display. Even simple things will differ between some browsers like Lynx vs..
> say IE.
>
> Design either in IE and look over in FF or the other way around. Like most
> IT I do things in FF a lot but I *always* check in IE.
>
> This topic is rather broad - just design for your audience which in most
> cases is IE + FF. Most websites don't care much about the remaining 1 or 2%.
>
> TK
> http://www.tomkitta.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Sandra Clark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2006 9:33 PM
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: RE: browser accessibility
>
>
> http://www.webstandards.org
> http://www.w3.org
> http://www.alistapart.com
> http://www.shayna.com
>
>
> Search for web standards on google.
>
> Basically, xHTML 1.0 strict or HTML 4.0 Strict doctypes will give you
> standards based rendering across browsers.\
> CSS2 is your presentation layer.  HTML/xHTML gives your content meaning
> (search for structural HTML)
>
> CSS2 works well in most modern browsers. IE6 is an exception (it was built
> in 2001), IE7 is better but not perfect.  Design your web page in Firefox
> first, then work on IE after.
>
> Sandra Clark
> ==============================
> http://www.shayna.com
> Training in Cascading Style Sheets and Accessibility
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Richard White [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2006 9:04 PM
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: browser accessibility
>
> hi, i dont like to post non cf queries on here but my experience of this
> site says that there are some very technically advanced developers on here
> and i would truly appreciate some advice :)
>
> i am beginning to become familiar with coldfusion, html, and javascript, and
> am just approaching xhtml and css. I have had people working for me before
> developing sites and they have always told me that developing sites for
> multi-browser accessibility is a very difficult job. I have even known some
> people to develop different pages for different browsers, or to place lots
> of code to make sure that the site looks the same on all browsers.
>
> However, i find it diifcult to believe that there isnt a standard way of
> programming which if done correctly means the pages will look the same
> across all browsers. I have recently heard that as long as you develop your
> css and xhtml to the correct standards then this will not be a problem.
>
> i would really appreciate some advice on this if possible, and if it is
> possible to develop pages for this in xhtml and css can anyone provide any
> links to any sites where i can read more on how to achieve this, as i cant
> seem to find many good guides .
>
> thanks for any help or advice you can provide.
>
>
>
>
>
> 

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