Firebug.

On 8/15/10, Michael Gersten <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Well done CSS is a joy. And even crappy CSS is better than the old
>> HTML3 crap because it is trivial to override.
>
> Trivial? OK, can you please explain how to override bad CSS?
>
> First, simple question: How can you get a copy of the current CSS
> being used to display the page that you are looking at?
>
> Oh, right -- this page might contain several frames and iframes, each
> of which has its own CSS rules. So if you did get a copy of the CSS
> being used on this page, it would in fact have several sub-sets of
> rules.
>
> Then, you need some way to tell a browser to use your modified CSS
> instead. I haven't seen this in any browser.
>
> I have seen "Override all CSS, all over the web, with my set here".
> But different sites will have different sets of rules and standards --
> an override that fixes this site may break that site.
>
> So tell me, how does the typical end-user override the CSS of a page
> that makes it look ugly?
> _______________________________________________
> MacOSX-talk mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk
>


-- 
Best Regards,

John Musbach
_______________________________________________
MacOSX-talk mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk

Reply via email to