On 13 Mar 2009 Rob Kendrick wrote: > We've been here before.
I'm well aware of that! > NetSurf is a modern browser, unlike many others that have long histories. But many web sites have long histories too! > Implementing HTML first and then CSS later would be the wrong > approach; it'd result in something bloaty and not render as well as it > does. OK, I concede that the two should be designed together, but one would expect a web browser first and foremost to be able to interpret html. That should be a given. Sorry, but I can't see why it should be so difficult to parse the <body> tag and use the link colours as defaults rather than some hard-coded colours that you can't even set in Choices... And if you ignore the link colours why use the bgcolor attribute which can just as easily be overridden by CSS? Using one without the other doesn't make sense and is bound to cause contrast problems. -- _ |_|. _ Richard Porter http://www.minijem.plus.com/ |\_||_ mailto:[email protected] Disclaimer: Please imagine about 50 lines of pointless clutter.
