On 16/10/2007, Kathy Wheeler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I seem to recall that at one stage certain versions of Netscape/
Mozilla would not render CSS at all if Javascript was disabled. I
have no idea whether that is still the case with some browsers?
Netscape 4.x supported JSSS, which lost out
Hi David and Elle,
I've made some changes and it's behaving much better, can I impose
upon you again to re-look and let me know how it looks to you?
URL http://www.abilityincorporated.org.au/index.php
Also David you said:
seems a bit peculiar that the navigation and copyright seem to be
more
Vicki Stebbins wrote:
I've made some changes and it's behaving much better, can I impose
upon you again to re-look and let me know how it looks to you?
URL http://www.abilityincorporated.org.au/index.php
Vicki
It is behaving much better and no longer dropping the float in IE6.0
Hello,
plaese take a look at the following link:
http://www.digitale-bibliothek.de/Downloads/CSS-Test/blog.htm
http://www.digitale-bibliothek.de/Downloads/CSS-Test/style.css
In the middle column there are several blog entries. The second entry (Zeno
Food) contains a larger image. If I narrow the
Alan Gresley wrote:
Christian Heilmann wrote:
Here is the assumption this article made: a drop down menu should
work regardless of input device and stay on the screen when
completely expanded without causing scrollbars and thus becoming
impossible to reach the last items. Anything wrong
I've got a situation where firefox (2.0.0.7) and Safari (2.0.4), both
Mac, are displaying a particular margin differently. Is there any kind
of hack to deliver CSS code specifically to one browser of the other?
Thanks
--
Rick Lecoat
On Oct 17, 2007, at 8:11 PM, Rick Lecoat wrote:
I've got a situation where firefox (2.0.0.7) and Safari (2.0.4), both
Mac, are displaying a particular margin differently. Is there any kind
of hack to deliver CSS code specifically to one browser of the other?
There was a thread a few days ago
On 17/10/07 (12:57) Philippe said:
Which browser/version is correct in your case ?
A test-case illustrating the issue might be helpful.
Philippe
Thanks for the response, Philippe;
In the end I worked around the problem -- seemed a better solution than
hacking the CSS with breakable filters.
On 2007-10-17, Kenny wrote:
I am inserting much content into elements using the 'content' property
and the '::before' and '::after' pseudo‐elements. The inserted content
is mostly punctuation and other content important to the document
presentation.
If it's important for understanding
Hi all,
Just ran into this while working on an automotive tab. The grafic for
it is called auto.gif
#topnav a#tn_auto {
background: url(/grafx/auto.gif) no-repeat 0 0;
}
My editor highlighted auto.gif in the background url, due to auto
being a reserved word.
It seems to work in my
Hello,
This is my first post, a short intro: b. in South Africa, 37,
background engineering, working as atmospheric science researcher in
Tokyo, interests in LaTeX, web design, and document archiving and
long-term compatibility. Using Debian and Ubuntu GNU/linux for work
and at home.
I've
Hello all!
As I have no PC by hand right now, it would be nice to get feedback
what are the problems in IE for this site:
http://www.theaterjugendring.de/index.php
http://www.theaterjugendring.de/wp-content/themes/tjr/style.css
Thanks in advance
Georg
http://portenkirchner.net/
iChat /
Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
Hello,
This is my first post, a short intro: b. in South Africa, 37,
background engineering, working as atmospheric science researcher in
Tokyo, interests in LaTeX, web design, and document archiving and
long-term compatibility. Using Debian and Ubuntu GNU/linux
On 17 Oct 2007, at 14:32, Brian Cummiskey wrote:
Just ran into this while working on an automotive tab. The
grafic for
it is called auto.gif
#topnav a#tn_auto {
background: url(/grafx/auto.gif) no-repeat 0 0;
}
My editor highlighted auto.gif in the background url, due to auto
Georg Portenkirchner wrote:
Hello all!
As I have no PC by hand right now, it would be nice to get feedback
what are the problems in IE for this site:
http://www.theaterjugendring.de/index.php
http://www.theaterjugendring.de/wp-content/themes/tjr/style.css
Georg,
I've taken
Alan Gresley wrote:
I have been following this thread with particular interest but staying in the
background while it bounded in and out of holy war territory. Keyboard
Accessibility with CSS is possible by using the :focus pseudo selector but at
this time, only Firefox and Mozilla (maybe
Nick Fitzsimons wrote:
It's a bug in your editor; even IE doesn't have _that_ degree of a
problem parsing CSS.
Thanks Nick.
I'm using (a surely out-dated version of) Edit Plus.
__
css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 10/17/07, Rafael [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
I've been trying to improve my own webpage design (header, 3
columns, footer) to cater for gecko, khtml and IE6/7 rendering /../
What I am worried about is the following: how can one design CSS
styles that resize the
Still working out a few problems with a new site. I've posted a couple of
questions to the list with great results. Now, the client is insisting that
a Contact button be placed so that it straddles a couple of borders. If the
layout was left aligned, I could position it absolutely but the design
On 10/16/07, Alan Gresley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The normal hover functioning of the menu works in most browsers. Any test
with the Khtml or Webkit browser engines would be appreciated. Regarding full
accessibility at this point in time, I say that this menu is currently one of
the best
Apologies to all for the multi-post. seems my mail server hiccuped at
just the wrong moment
--
Non scholae sed vitae discimus
__
css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d
List wiki/FAQ --
Well, the good news is that a margin seems to work just fine, so if
you add 'id=contact' to that image, and the next CSS it should be
positioned more or less where you want it...
#contact {
margin-right: 10px;
margin-top: -10px;
}
Now the bad news... yes, IE. There is a
Thank you everybody who sent me screenshots.
After some changes finally the site seems to work in Safari, Firefox
and Opera on a Mac.
But Internet Explorer (6 and 7) still gives me headaches.
Maybe someone has a hint for me?
Thank you!
http://www.theaterjugendring.de/index.php
Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
What I am worried about is the following: how can one design CSS
styles that resize the block elements when the user decided to
increase the font (of the inline text)? At some point, all the fine
examples I've found (e.g.,
Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
[...] exchanging video clips of sites as we worked, and
showing off the IE7 zoom. Very impressive indeed. I haven't updated
Opera but will do so.
Not sure if this is what you mean, but... unless you have a really
old version of Opera, it already has the zooming
Rafael wrote:
[...] Some people set the images size in relative units too to
get a better scaling effect, just like zooming.
Right, I didn't think about this possibility. Thanks a lot once
again. Gernot
Me neither, so I was a little disappointed of myself when I learned
about it in
On 10/16/07, Lyn Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The first being a drop down menu I have developed won't display the
appropriate links. I seems the the drop down works but the links
won't appear.
the second problem is I'm trying to float six different div elements
side to side but after
I dont have too much experience in tables so I guess I am missing something.
please see my well Plate Map below. My table is where the black
border starts.
http://www.sandygonzales.com/cpc/user_controls.php
My table is set to a width of 374px and height of 207px with border
collapsing turned
1: Has anyone ever been able to design their way around IE6 faulty
preservation of height/width ratio for images scaled with only one
dimension - 'width: some value' ?
This is a first load and reload problem with large images on
somewhat slow connections, as IE6 corrects its errant ways if we
Check out the navigation and RSS link on the top right part of this page:
http://www.scienceprogress.org/
Everything lines up fine in Firefox and IE-Win, but in Safari, the RSS
icon drops below the navigation stuff and floats to the left...
Any idea why?
http://www.ddiv.com/clients/voa/final_builds/chinese_news.html
The problem area is on the right hand side, where the Tabbed navigation items
are. The two buttons are orange and grey, side by side. They are appearing
irregularly in Win 2000/XP on IE6.0 and IE5.5 with a blue border on either
Matt wrote:
Check out the navigation and RSS link on the top right part of this page:
http://www.scienceprogress.org/
Everything lines up fine in Firefox and IE-Win, but in Safari, the RSS
icon drops below the navigation stuff and floats to the left...
Any idea why?
Mac OS X 10.4.10
On 18/10/2007, at 10:18 AM, David Laakso wrote:
Matt wrote:
Check out the navigation and RSS link on the top right part of
this page:
http://www.scienceprogress.org/
Everything lines up fine in Firefox and IE-Win, but in Safari, the
RSS
icon drops below the navigation stuff and floats to
On Oct 18, 2007, at 6:21 AM, Matt wrote:
Check out the navigation and RSS link on the top right part of this
page:
http://www.scienceprogress.org/
Everything lines up fine in Firefox and IE-Win, but in Safari, the RSS
icon drops below the navigation stuff and floats to the left...
Anne E . Shroeder wrote:
http://www.ddiv.com/clients/voa/final_builds/chinese_news.html
The problem area is on the right hand side, where the Tabbed
navigation items are. The two buttons are orange and grey, side by
side. They are appearing irregularly in Win 2000/XP on IE6.0 and
IE5.5
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