@ Joshua I have to dispel this right off the bat:
"The problem with using css is that IE browsers doesn't support it yet :-( I asked this because it is possible to do it with jquery without using css and images. I was wondering whether mootools has the function to do that too." jQuery is a js library and is bound to all the same constraints of html and css that any other library is, it is not in any way more advanced and cannot magically make rounded corners in IE through any means other than that which are available to the web. If you want rounded corners there are many options, ruzee shaded border, DD roundies, and heck i even wrote one that uses the dotted border property and 4 divs per target el (the dotted border is round in IE down to IE7 - if you are asking for IE6 support, sorry I hate shit browsers, those users are worthless and should be culled). There are many different approaches just Google that question and you'll find a plethora of options. On Aug 22, 10:25 am, Aaron Newton <[email protected]> wrote: > If you're really adventurous you can play with MooTools ART, though it's > still in development and has no > documentation...http://github.com/anutron/art/tree/master > > On Sat, Aug 22, 2009 at 4:47 AM, Oskar Krawczyk > <[email protected]>wrote: > > > > > Forget about all of that. > > > *DD_roundies* is the only script worth exploring: > >http://www.dillerdesign.com/experiment/DD_roundies/ > > > O. > > > On 22 Aug 2009, at 11:43, Joshua Partogi wrote: > > > I'll try curvycorners. It looks good. Phatfusion uses images which I don't > > prefer. > > > Cheers. > > > On Sat, Aug 22, 2009 at 8:06 PM, rborn <[email protected]> wrote: > > >> Google? > >> curvycorners > >> phatfusion rounded corners > > > -- > >http://blog.scrum8.com > >http://twitter.com/scrum8
