Hi, it's me again ;-)
Link : url: http://ikjensen.dk/test/
Having a major problem with this layout.
Strangely, In IE 6, it shows almost as I wanted it to look like.
In FF2, it doesn't.
Second problem.
The menu in the left sidebar works ok on the Index-page, but not on a
second page.
Menu :
I've found some curious behavior with background:transparent in IE7. I
was working on a CSS image replacement, and was seeing the old IE
flicker. In the course of trouble-shooting I made a version using only
differently-colored backgrounds, not images. You can see my test page
here:
Ib Jensen wrote:
Link : url: http://ikjensen.dk/test/
Strangely, In IE 6, it shows almost as I wanted it to look like.
In FF2, it doesn't.
The menu in the left sidebar works ok on the Index-page, but not on a
second page.
This may help compliant browsers...
Name of the game:
pretty strange indeed.
thanks for sharing.
Virgil
http://www.jampmar.com
On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 10:57 PM, Mary Ellen Curtin curtin...@gmail.com wrote:
I've found some curious behavior with background:transparent in IE7. I
was working on a CSS image replacement, and was seeing the old IE
2009/1/8 David Laakso da...@chelseacreekstudio.com:
Ib Jensen wrote:
Name of the game: Code to Opera -- FF, Safari, and Camino will follow
suit. Fix IE.
#container {padding-top: 1px;}-- fix 4 collapsing margins
.head h1{font-size:250%; margin: 40px 0 10px 0;padding: 0;
Mary Ellen Curtin wrote:
I've found some curious behavior with background:transparent in IE7. I
was working on a CSS image replacement, and was seeing the old IE
flicker. In the course of trouble-shooting I made a version using only
differently-colored backgrounds, not images. You can see
Alan Gresley wrote:
I don't know why it happens but floating the list fixes the bug in IE7
and doesn't seem to effect other browsers.
.menu ul, .menu li {
list-style:none;margin: 0;padding: 0;
float:left; /* ADD */
}
Thanks, Alan. I've updated the test page:
Ib Jensen wrote:
2009/1/8 David Laakso da...@chelseacreekstudio.com:
Could not find menu second page.
Try in the Top-menu-bar = first menu-point = Genealogy, Menu-point =
Kings of Denmark.
On this page : The menu in the right side.
re: http://ikjensen.dk/test/
Dunno.
Greetings Cascading Style Sheet Amateurs, Experts, and Professionals.
The following questions and examples are directly related to style sheets being
processed by Gecko powered browsers like Firefox. These questions aren't
specified towards the browsers themselves but more or less to the
I'm wondering if combined selectors have a lower specificity than
non-combined. For example in my stylesheet I have:
.hm #events_snip .date, .article { color: red; }
.hm #news_snip .date, .article { color: green; }
On the page the .article class shows up green, even though it is NOT
Hi
The header in the page below displays incorrectly in Firefox v3.0.5 and
I'm struggling to work out the cause.
http://www.ultimatefooterad.com/salespage/index.htm
As you can see, the whole header graphic has moved down so that the blue
bar that runs across the browser viewport isn't
Your selectors are wrong. You aren't using descendent selectors
for .article. You are saying .hm #news_snip .date has the color green
AND ALSO .article has the color green, because of the comma. That
means you have two declarations for .article, and the second one is
over-riding the first.
I'm looking for a way to specify that text in th cells be vertical
such that Latin text is rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise (text
running bottom to top).
Specifically, I'm looking for a way that affects layout--not for a way
to rotate the box post-layout. I want the text be laid out on
Erik M. Zettersten wrote:
In the following example (http://turnaroundllc.com/beta/).
What determines why the footer moves down in Windows but stays appropriate
and correct in a MAC OS environment.
Where in this validated style sheet
(http://turnaroundllc.com/beta/styles/global.css) did
Brett wrote:
I'm wondering if combined selectors have a lower specificity than
non-combined. For example in my stylesheet I have:
.hm #events_snip .date, .article { color: red; }
.hm #news_snip .date, .article { color: green; }
On the page the .article class shows up green, even though
Hello,
I have a web page with three columns. The left-hand and right-hand columns are
of fixed width. The middle column is so arranged, that the column 'adjusts
itself' to make full use the different screen widths. At larger screen widths,
the length of the lines becomes a bit long for
Graham Cox wrote:
The header in the page below displays incorrectly in Firefox v3.0.5 and
I'm struggling to work out the cause.
http://www.ultimatefooterad.com/salespage/index.htm
Hi Graham,
That's a collapsing margin issue. Adding this:
*{margin-top:0}
into your style sheet. Can't say
Hi Bruce,
On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 3:06 PM, bruce.som...@web.de wrote:
Is it possible, using CSS, to arrange that paragraphs in that middle column
are themselves split into two columns of equal width, when a specified line
length is exceeded? The text in the resulting left-hand one of these
I am having a problem with IE6 rendering a background color on the H2
element *sometimes*. In my stylesheet I have:
.news #news_list h2 {
background-color:#000;
line-height:36px;
margin-left:0px;
margin-right:10px;
}
.news #news_list h2 span {
color:#fff;
Hi Graham,
That's a collapsing margin issue. Adding this:
*{margin-top:0}
into your style sheet. Can't say which element has margining at the
top,
but adding that (generally as the first rule of the style sheet) will
help cure that.
Hi Graham,
Just did some checking and to be a bit
From: Ib Jensen ibkjen...@gmail.com
Link : url: http://ikjensen.dk/test/
Second problem.
The menu in the left sidebar works ok on the Index-page, but not on a
second page.
Menu : Genealogy - Kings of Denmark
Can you explain what you mean when you say it doesn't work? I see hover
effects, and
Hello list!
For all those in search of sensible values for font-family:
http://www.sitepoint.com/article/eight-definitive-font-stacks/
The samples are way to small, but the result seems nice to me.
djn
--
-
Dejan Kozina Web design studio
Dolina 346
Greetings,
This is probably a common problem in IE but I cannot find a previous
message in the archive for it.
There is a small gap of space (about 2px) below the header on this
page in IE:
http://www.goldendragonhouse.com/specs.html
http://www.goldendragonhouse.com/main.css
Note that the
There is a small gap of space (about 2px) below the header on this
page in IE:
http://www.goldendragonhouse.com/specs.html
http://www.goldendragonhouse.com/main.css
Hi Anne--
Either of these oughta help:
#topboxrightspecs img { display : block }
-or-
#topboxrightspecs img {
I'm struggling a little because I just started writing a web site about two
months ago. I have a word in the text of the home page (index.html) that I
need each letter of the word to be a different color. I did it in XHTML
transitional and it worked fine. I'm now trying to follow the strict
Using span elements with inline style blocks will fix your problem.
Example:
span style=color:#0063dc;font-family:Verdana;Flick/spanspan
style=color:#ff0084;font-family:Georgia;r/span
On Jan 8, 2009, at 6:27 PM, James E. Darfler wrote:
I'm now trying to follow the strict
definition of XHTML
Dejan Kozina wrote:
For all those in search of sensible values for font-family:
http://www.sitepoint.com/article/eight-definitive-font-stacks/
djn
le triomphe de mediocre
--Baudelaire
__
css-discuss
Thank you, Delete Trebuchet MS from the font-family string and FF will
behave the same in Mac and PC. Aside: The construction of the page is
extremely fragile. Font-scaling, or minimum font-size 24px, turns it into an
unusable explosion in a gig-saw puzzle factory.How can I go about making
Brett wrote:
I am having a problem with IE6 rendering a background color on the H2
element *sometimes*.
That IE bug is well known but can be hard to describe.
It is a stacking-bug in that one or more layers of the element get
stacked behind whatever element, container, the element should be
I'm struggling a little because I just started writing a web site about two
months ago. I have a word in the text of the home page (index.html) that I
need each letter of the word to be a different color. I did it in XHTML
transitional and it worked fine. I'm now trying to follow the strict
That's way more code than just styling it inline, IMHO. Even if you
were going to do it this way, it would be better to create simpler
classes:
a{color:red;}
.blue{color:blue;}
.green{color:green;}
A class overrides a simple element selector, so the classed span
(.blue) would override the
Hi Everyone
I've been banging my head against this problem for two days to no avail. I
haven't got a great deal of experience when it comes to creating complex CSS
layouts, so please don't assume too much knowledge.
The CSS I created seems to be working fine on hand-built pages like this
one:
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