>> Brian M. Curran wrote:
>>
>>> Marc or anyone else,
>>> However, I can't get the text for class .columnTitle to center align. If 
>>> I set padding and margin for h3 to zero and then text-align: center; it 
>>> works. However when I add the class it doesn't work. I added the class 
>>> because I want three of the four columns to have a center aligned h3.
>>> Sincerely,
>>> Brian Curran
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> The headings h1 through h6 are used to create an outline (like the kind 
>> we all made in school) of a documents content. Consequently, h2 follows 
>> h1, h3 follows h2, and so on. Most Web documents have only one h1 (as  it 
>> is usually the title of the document).  You may have as many h2 through 
>> h6 as you need. CSS is used to set their look and feel. A class is only 
>> needed to distinguish a specific difference  -- for example, you have 47 
>> h2 headings,  only 3 of which should be red (  those 3 get: h2.c1 {color: 
>> red}).
>>


> David Laakso wrote:
> re: <http://www.locallaw11news.com/>
>
> Good! Its better as of this writing. Want to push it?
>
> This:
> <h1>Local Law 11 News <span class="header"> and all things related to 
> Local Law 11 </span></h1>
> Becomes:
> <h1>Local Law 11 News <b>and all things related to Local Law 11</b></h1>
> h1 b {font-size: your-call; font-weight: normal;}
>
> This:
> <h3>What is Local Law 11?</h3>
> Becomes:
> <h2>What is Local Law 11?</h2>
>
> This:
> <p>
> <span class="credits">by: Brian M. Curran</span><br />
> <span class="credits">Posted: September 17, 2009</span><br />
>
> Becomes:
> <div id="credit">
> <p>by: Brian M. Curran</p>
> <p>Posted: September 17, 2009</p>
> <div>
> CSS
> #credit p {your call}
>
> These (and the ones at the very bottom of that column):
> <br />
> Local Law 11, in a nutshell, is a New York City Department of Buildings 
> law that ...............<br />
> <br />
> This article has been written to serve as a brief primer on Local Law 11. 
> For more .................<br />
> <br />
> Become:
> <p>Local Law 11, in a nutshell, is a New York City Department of Buildings 
> law that ...............</p>
> <p>This article has been written to serve as a brief primer on Local Law 
> 11. For more .................</p>
>
> These:
> <span class="subTitle">What's the history of Local Law 11?</span><br />
> Local Law 11 is referred to in many different............<br />
> Become:
> <h4>What's the history of Local Law 11?</h4>
> <p>Local Law 11 is referred to in many different............</p>
> CSS
> h4 {your call}
>
> These:
> <h5>Articles</h5>
> <h5>Topics</h5>
> <h5>Advertisers</h5>
>
> And:
> Everyone screen does not default to a white screen (my default is fuchsia 
> to keep myself from making this mistake).
> add:
> html, body {background: #fff; color: #000; }
> This will keep the NYC Web "Accessibility Police" from shutting you down:
> body {   /*font-size: small; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;*/
> font: 100%/1.4 'Helvetica Neue', Arial, sans-serif;
>    }
> Let the p inherit 100%(default) and set  h1-h5 using percent.
> You may want to make the narrow columns a little wider and adjust the nav 
> (
>
> Good luck.
> ~d




David,
Thank you for all the great feedback. I made all the suggested changes, and 
learned in the process. Thanks again. One question though. In regards to:

> This will keep the NYC Web "Accessibility Police" from shutting you down:
> body {   /*font-size: small; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;*/
> font: 100%/1.4 'Helvetica Neue', Arial, sans-serif;
>    }

I made the changes, but don't understand the need for them. My font size is 
now larger than I'd like it. I'm not familiar with accessibility issues. Any 
comments?

Sincerely,
Brian













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