Thank you, yes that was very helpful and appreciated!
On Sep 18, 12:36 am, Sandman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi James,
>
> When your GWT app is compiled, the CSS styles in the Standard.css file
> get injected inline into your code. Hence they take precedence over any
> external file that is linked. One way to override this behavior is by
> using the "!important" flag in your CSS file.
>
> Look up the following link for more
> details.http://osdir.com/ml/GoogleWebToolkit/2009-04/msg01066.html
>
> Hope this helps.
> Take care.
>
> James wrote:
> > Hello All,
> > I'm new to GWT and was wondering what CSS level GWT 1.6 supports?
>
> > Also, by using firebug I realized that GWT creates a standard.css file
> > along with the app named css file. Apparently when you have the same
> > element declared in both, the standard css is the last read by the
> > browser and it's settings are used. I watched this in practice as
> > changes with elements in the app named css file weren't taking effect.
> > What is the standard practice for keeping the standard.css GWT styles,
> > but still add to them for specific widgets in the app named css file?
>
> > Thanks,
> >JamesEston
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