So I help out a local designer with coding problems. I showed her the wonders (well sorta) of CSS, and now she's an addict too.
One of her current projects is a local sign/engraving company who has a 'quote' form that was created using Visual Studio for her by a relative of the company owner. After I cleaned up all the absolute positioning... (lol) It wouldn't work in anything but IE (no javascript would fire on Fox/Opera), though the layout worked great! Fixed that (ie specific js functions, document.all), by giving it the ol' HTML 4.0 Transitional doctype, now the form functions in all 3. But. The layout is screwed to hell. You can see the normal pages like: www.plastic-tags.com/materials.php Is there any glaringly obvious reason why the layouts are so screwed in the browsers? Will I likely need to create browser specific conditional styles? Its just not coming to me while staring at this all ;) If you'd like to dig into the problem, here's her stylesheets - keep in mind they were partly created w/Dreamweaver. The used stylesheets: plastic-tags.com/form2.css - the for quote form page only plastic-tags.com/indexpvii.css - the more basic styles plastic-tags.com/p7pmv5.css - for the navigation bar (I think) } -- Emily DeJoode Freelance Web-Worker snowflake-tech.net ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d IE7b2 testing hub -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=IE7 List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/