Jess Jacobs wrote:
> all of this makes total sense. I don't know why it doesn't come to me
>  while I'm working on these things...

Guess it may have something to do with how frequent you run into these
issues.

> also, i hadn't done anything for browser testing yet, so don't think 
> i'm a complete goon. :) was just working in FF to begin with.

:-)

I'm too pragmatic to think anything about people who post questions on
practical matters.
Of course, I never do /anything/ in Firefox - to begin with ;-)

> Is there a "best practices" kind of list/guide/book for CSS? I feel 
> like I understand the main concepts but am just lacking in these 
> details of browser war-style stuff.

There are specs, references and "personal preferences", and "best
practices" can at best be filed under "personal preferences" and are
subject to change - IMO.

I think the specs...
<http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/#specs>
...and references like the one on sitepoint...
<http://reference.sitepoint.com/css>
...offer the best guidance at the moment.

Sites like this one may also be useful...
<http://www.webdevout.net/browser-support-css>
...but it seems to be difficult to keep such support-tables up to date
so I prefer to test those browsers myself. After all: support doesn't
mean it'll actually work as intended - especially not when mixed with
everything else we may want our designs to contain.

regards
        Georg
-- 
http://www.gunlaug.no
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