i spotted this in the css
div#thumbnailheaders dt dd {float:right; width:100px;}
should'nt it be
div#thumbnailheaders dl dd {float:right; width:100px;}
atbSam
Rachel Radford wrote:
There are many ways of making a css rule so that different browsers see it
differently (do a google search
Hi Bruce
I'm working on a bug right now so I don't have much time
For more control over the dt positioning, apply position:relative to the dl
and then use absolute positioning for the dt. Or use negative margins to
move it without the positioning.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL
Hi Bruce,
It's looking good but quite different between FF and IE...
Try putting a negative top margin on the image with the hand and key... that
should fix that problem for Firefox. But you might need to make it
conditional so that IE 6 won't do it too. From a design point of view
perhaps a
On 8/4/05, Rachel Radford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Bruce,
It's looking good but quite different between FF and IE...
Try putting a negative top margin on the image with the hand and key... that
should fix that problem for Firefox. But you might need to make it
conditional so that IE 6
There are many ways of making a css rule so that different browsers see it
differently (do a google search for css filters...) but the way I do it
would be like this:
div#maincontent_image{/*used as a holder and placement for main images which
appear on a page*/
float:left;
width:214px;