Well, it is called hyper TEXT markup language, not GRAPHIC design language.
If you need an exact layout you should be uploading a graphic. Of course
then text only browsers can't read your output. I was design for
disseminating information not hype (at least that is not what I thought they
meant by hyper-text). Yes, I know, very few commercial websites have much
meaningful information in them.

Ciao,
Graywolf
http://pages.prodigy.net/graywolfphoto
----------------------------------------------------------------


----- Original Message -----
From: Nitin Garg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2002 5:14 PM
Subject: Re: OT: What Do You See?


> On Sun, Mar 31, 2002 at 05:05:41PM -0500, Mark Roberts wrote:
> > >> All a webpage writer can do is ensure that his code is HTML
> > >> compliant. If it is, and your browser has a problem with it,
> > >> then it is your problem, not the author of the webpage.
> > >> There are standards in place for a reason.
> > >> William Robb
> >
> > Yep. If you do it right, it'll look *different* in different browsers,
but it'll
> > work OK.
>
> works ok alright but some (many?) folks worry about the difference since
> it can be significant. A pal of mine was venting yesterday about getting
> the layout right in both ie and netscape. Wasnt easy he said and he is a
> damn good programmer.
> -
> This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List.  To unsubscribe,
> go to http://www.pdml.net and follow the directions. Don't forget to
> visit the Pentax Users' Gallery at http://pug.komkon.org .
-
This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List.  To unsubscribe,
go to http://www.pdml.net and follow the directions. Don't forget to
visit the Pentax Users' Gallery at http://pug.komkon.org .

Reply via email to