Greg Wilker wrote:
I'm interested in responses to this aspect:
There are currently a lot of validation errors with the template; both css
and xhtml.
My personal rule of thumb is to get as close to validation as possible -
shooting for perfect. Now and then I question the strictness of
Gabriele, why does DOLOR overlay power of combining
when I reduce the width of the window ? Is that truly
fluid ?
Philip Taylor
Gabriele Romanato wrote:
Here's my first, basic test/demo:
http://onwebdev.blogspot.com/2010/12/css-templates-outside-box.html
comments are welcome,
Doesn't crash, but looks complete and utter c...@p in IE7
under Win/XP at Ctrl-0 size, but suddenly snaps into place
at the first Ctrl-minus.
** P.
David Laakso wrote:
Signature link crashes IETester 6/7/8 on Mac OS X 10.4 running Parallels
XP. I find this delightful and rather
David Laakso wrote:
PS It is not a list policy but bottom posting ... is appreciated.
By some : others prefer to read what the respondent has to say,
rather than having to wade through recycled material before
learning anything new.
Philip Taylor
--
Not sent from my i-Pad, i-Phone,
Felix Miata wrote:
Any thoughts on this conversion from table layout exercise?
orig: http://cornerstonebaptistofhc.org/about.html
new: http://fm.no-ip.com/Auth/Tmp/cbchc-about-n.html
Great to see Ephesians 2:20 as text, not graphic, but
Philippians 2:5 deserves better ALT text than
Felix Miata wrote:
Feel free to play elsewhere if list policy bothers you so much you feel
unable to adhere to it.
List policy doesn't bother me at all. Rules are for the
guidance of the wise and the blind obedience of the foolish.
Philip Taylor
--
Not sent from my i-Pad, i-Phone,
Chetan Crasta wrote:
Here is a detailed article on creating HTML emails:
http://articles.sitepoint.com/article/code-html-email-newsletters
And here is a much shorter, much simpler one : just don't.
Philip Taylor
__
A CMS, over which I have no control, auto-generates a number
of the following blocks (with different values for the
hrefs, background-images, and the textual content of
the innermost A element) :
div class=album_box
a
G.Sørtun wrote:
you have so many style-repetitions targeting the same elements
that you better go through it all yourself and correct or delete the
style that sets that bottom border in the first place.
regards
Georg
And please : if you /must/ have a masthead graphic as opposed
to a simple
I think I was the one to use it first (recently); it
is just a colloquial form of how about, intended
solely for humerous effect, and possibly modelled
on the how the average speaker of Br.E believes
that the average speaker of Am.E speaks ...
** Phil (native speaker of Br.E).
How's about :
http://lists.css-discuss.org/mailman/private/css-d/
linked from
http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d
which is in your own message's fixed trailer !
Philip Taylor
John wrote:
Is there a link to use for searching archives of this lists'
Keith Purtell wrote:
Pardon my ignorance, but does this mean leading is not normally applied
to replaced elements, or that applying leading to the replaced element
(in this case an img) would be correct procedure and avoid the need for
the padding technique I used?
Eric Meyer addresses this
bruce.som...@web.de wrote:
Michael Gearym...@geary.comwrote:
That would also let Adobe present the BrowserLab UI in your own language
instead of English if they support it (and it looks from the URL like they
may have other languages besides English).
That always annoys the daylights out
Dear Ada --
I do not know enough programming to understand what the errors listed by
CSS Validator mean…; thus, I am afraid I cannot correct them…I do
understand, though, that these are errors of syntax in both the
horizontal and the vertical navigation spry. Would correcting these
errors of
G.Sørtun wrote:
filter:alpha... is proprietary Internet Explorer syntax/functionality.
If it serves a purpose - makes IE behave as it should - it should be
kept in the stylesheet no matter what the CSS validator says.
That is a philosophical perspective which you are perfectly
entitled to
Sorry, Ada, I am sure you are not interested in this digression :
if you look at the Web-Consultants version, you will see that
I have also made some improvements to the horizontal menu bar,
but I am unclear what changes you would also like to make to
the vertical one.
Come on Eric : rule the
Alan Gresley wrote:
Philip. The document that Ada has it which you did some work is xthml
traditional, has way to many divs and table elements. It has
text-align:center for the container. This does center block elements in
IE6 and IE7. The document basically caters for the lowest dominator,
Dear Ada -- Your page has seven errors [1]. Until you correct
these, all behaviours are effectively random.
Philip Taylor
[1] http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http://138.26.120.126/CAMAC/Trial19.html
Ada Elgavish wrote:
Hello,
I am developing a website at:
Ada Elgavish wrote:
Dear Philip,
Thanks again for introducing me to the Validation Service!
I corrected all the mistakes detected by the validation service. Still
have the problems below…
Any help will be appreciated!
You're very welcome, Ada, and congratulations on correcting
the errors
Changing the first two lines to :
!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd;
html xmlns=http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml; lang=en xml:lang=en dir=ltr
reduces the errors to nine and the warnings to one;
you may be able to see the corrected version
Ada Elgavish wrote:
Does anybody have any ideas where I should look for the problem?
I think that, as this is a CSS list, and as you have a CSS problem,
you should share with us your CSS as well as your HTML; a little
fragment of HTML, with no context and no CSS, is really of very
little
Brian M. Curran wrote:
1. wwwdotdomain.com/subitem1.html
2. wwwdotdomain.com/item2/subitem1.html
2., because subitem1.html could exist under multiple parents.
Philip Taylor
__
css-discuss [cs...@lists.css-discuss.org]
Ilham Firdaus wrote:
I found a weirdness. I put the css file into separated file but located
in the same directory as where the html page call the css file.
But looks like there's no change in my browser displayed.
Anybody would be so nice to tell me where my mistake?
Thank you very much
Aren't these the p and a referred to, Tim :
p align=centera href=http://www.otekno.biz/ps;Easy
shopping/a/p
** Phil.
Tim Arnold wrote:
Also, it appears that none of the elements in your page are being targeted
by your CSS. You have styles defined for p and a but there are nop
ora
Chris, I have to be honest, I do not know what question(s) you
are asking, IF you are asking how should I enter EMW8 throughout
my site so that it comes out consistently and with the 8 raised
(and perhaps grey) without affecting anything else ?, I would
propose something along the lines of the
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote:
One nitpick: I'd use 'em' instead of 'ex'.
Some browsers have poor support for 'ex' (treating 1ex= 0.5em, whatever the
font in use, no questions asked) - IE running on XP, Opera.
Some browsers have half broken support - with very different computation of
what
Duncan Hill wrote:
Off-Topic but for clarification RFC 4343 states that URL's are
case-insensitive.
I hate to be picky, but I really do not think that that can be the case.
For a case-sensitive web server, the following two URLs are completely
different :
debussy007 wrote:
Hi,
I have a DIV element inside a TD element, and I try to get the DIV's height
equal to the TD height.
I'm not convinced that you can. Unless my brain is going screwy,
there would be an infinite causal loop if you could, since the
height of the containing TR, from which
David Laakso wrote:
Lie! Cheat! Steal :-) !
http://chelseacreekstudio.com/ca/cssd/td.html
And if the second TD doesn't contain the same contents as the first ?
http://web-consultants.org.uk/Sites/tests/Laakso.html
Philip Taylor
David Laakso wrote:
Don't be silly, Philip..
http://chelseacreekstudio.com/ca/cssd/tdtd.html
The essence of my question was : what if the contents
of the second div do not have the same natural height
as the contents of the first ?
Chris Blake wrote:
P.S. I need to be using sub-script and super-script a fair bit on this
site, any warnings or words of wisdom about doing this?
In my experience, sub- and superscripts only too easily destroy
the regularity of the underlying text grid; in order to re-instate
this
Jukka K. Korpela wrote:
vertical-align: baseline;
position: relative;
bottom: some factorex;
That looks really cool and simple and seems to fix things nicely. How
come I never thought of that?
Don't know. What I /do/ know is that the problem drove me crazy
until I hit on that idea.
Are
Tim Climis wrote:
Using a server side language (eg php, perl, asp, etc) to shrink images, and
save them to the server. That way you shrink the image once and use it over
and over again, rather than sending everyone who visits your site a big image
(slowing page load) and then making their
you
envisage it looking to the intending user.
Philip Taylor
Tod wrote:
On 9/15/2010 3:44 PM, Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd) wrote:
Tod, could you draw a picture of what you are attempting to achieve ?
Philip Taylor
Attached are two files, single.gif and multi.gif
Resource Centre/PMO (which is the only 2nd-level item
that appears to have children) remains highlit for me
when selecting a child.
Seamonkey 2.0.8+EMET, Win/XP;SP3.
Philip Taylor
Rob Emenecker wrote:
I have a suckerfish menu that I am trying to get the second-level element to
Tod, could you draw a picture of what you are attempting to achieve ?
Philip Taylor
Tod wrote:
I have the requirement to allow users to make multiple selections from a
dropdown menu. However I need to accomplish this on a single line.
- A traditional dropdown satisfies the single line
Gabriele, I don't understand :
In a past project I used the following approach:
@import base.css;
@import layout.css;
@import typography.css;
@import colors.css;
The server-side developer (who used Ruby) encountered several problems when
trying to merge these files properly and in the
Claude Needham wrote:
I have developed a practice of using 100% in the body and then using
em elsewhere to set sizes.
I have vague memories of doing this because the percentage handled a
glitch in one browser or another. Can't recall the details now. Is
this a case of age invented
Brian M. Curran wrote:
Hello,
I'm going to be submitting an article to a site, and I'd like to be
technologically on par with it. This may be stretching the limits of this
css list, but I looked at the site's css for images that the site is using
that are working in a slideshow fashion, but I
Sorry, wrong line :-(
script type=text/javascript src=/javascript/menu.js/script
Philip Taylor
__
css-discuss [cs...@lists.css-discuss.org]
http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d
List wiki/FAQ --
Brian M. Curran wrote:
Hello Duncan. That's what I was talking about, that is, the gifs that are
animated.
I likened them to a slideshow effect, but I didn't mean slideshow literally.
I've never seen something like that before, hence my post.
The other responder to my post seemed to say that
Timariane Thornewig wrote:
Here's how you can see the problem I'm experiencing in IE7:
enter http://ipinfo.info/netrenderer/index.php
(this site is particularly helpful for me because I'm on a mac)
at that site in IE8, Render: http://www.ashelighting.com/architectural3.html
I'm going to
Ville Viklund wrote:
Is there a good reason to use this kind of selector #header ul li a
{..., instead of just #header li a? Is it considered best practice,
or why this is so commonly used?
I would venture a guess that it is commonly used because of a fairly
widespread misunderstanding of
Chris Blake wrote:
I disagree. There are ways to style forms, so why not!? Streamlined
makes me think that you're talking about speed so maybe adding images
and things isn't such a good idea in that sense but would make it look
better. Ermm, google it - there's lots out there. 'styling forms
Furthermore, I see no mysterious gaps, Gabriele :
http://web-consultants.org.uk/sites/tests/Inline-lists.html
Tested using Seamonkey 2.0.6 under Windows/XP;SP3.
Philip Taylor
Gabriele Romanato wrote:
A simple solution:
OK, then I suppose that Gabriele and I differ
over the meaning of mysterious in mysterious gaps.
I was expecting a single space-of-the-line, but
thought that Gabriele must be experiencing more in
order for them to qualify as mysterious.
Presumably white-space-collapse: discard will
remove the
Lineberger, Scott wrote:
Any and all suggestions are welcome.
Well, before the list-police step in, this probably isn't
the best place to ask (since it has nothing to do with
CSS per se), but perhaps your server technology will
allow you to dynamically add records, so the initial
form can
tedd wrote:
I have one suggestion, however, if you want iPad owners to review a
page, how about giving us something easier to type? The url
vze26m98.net/css-discuss/test-ipad.html is a lot to type.
Somewhat confused (not being an i-anything owner/user);
if you read your e-mail on an I-pad
Why not try the alternative :
link rel=stylesheet type=text/css media=all
href=style_120704.css
Philip Taylor
Keith Purtell wrote:
Well, the validator was a huge help. Two problems I ran into:
1- It did not like the way I imported my style sheet. I thought my tag
style
Well, I'm not sure if their recommendation was grounded
in fact, but it does look as though the memory of what
they actually proposed must have faded with the years,
because :
style type=text/css media=all @import=style_120704.css;/style
can never have been what was intended. There is a
Averill Ring at Irisweb wrote:
Fwiw, it is usually best to use a strict doctype for a new site.
Why?
Because it will help you (the page author) identify
out-of-date and/or deprecated practices (if you
validate the page, but not otherwise, unless your
authoring tool is DOCTYPE sensitive).
Nancy wrote:
Two unrelated questions.
1.
I am working on a website that can be edited by a variety of users using a
web-based CMS.
The CMS is rewriting inline style property values of zero.
For example, if the inline style is entered as:
p style=margin: 0;whatever text/p
LiveWhale
Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
My colleagues suggested that perhaps front end people only use tools?
I.e. nobody actually writes HTML by hand anymore?
Speaking as a former webmaster, I would not consider employing
anyone who could not write HTML CSS using Notepad (or the
platform equivalent). I may
Fascinated that there is Lime but not Green, Alan;
is this intentional ?
Philip Taylor
Alan Gresley wrote:
Hello List,
Initially being an exploration into mathematics and sacred geometry,
what I have discovered (like many others) is that hexadecimal colors
can be represented as a 3D
Intrigued :-) What handles the #IF/#ELSE/#ENDIFs ?
** Phil.
David Hucklesby wrote:
David Laakso has given an excellent solution. But I respectfully
disagree that SSI cannot be used. Here is a demo I made for a student
who wants to do that very thing. I hope it helps:
Ah : I see the article is entitled Apache Tutorial:
Introduction to Server Side Includes -- is the same
functionality available in all SSI processors, do
you know (for example, in IIS) ?
** Phil.
David Hucklesby wrote:
On 8/2/10 12:26 PM, Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd) wrote
John Dick wrote:
How do you style the following using inline style:
p:first-letter
{
color:#ff;
font-size:xx-large;
}
HTML is as follows:
p
You can use the :first-letter pseudo-element to add a special effect to the
first character of a text!
/p
I
John D wrote:
Well, you can, but not using a pseudoelement and inline CSS. Why would you
be restricted to inline CSS?
Because Google Websites (http://sites.google.com) does not allow editing of
headers to introduce external style sheets or header styles. That is the
problem. It is a
TriState Advantage, Kris Jacobson wrote:
Thank you for this article, I found it a good reinforcement of using id's and
class's.
I have a questions on styling lists and links in a div.
I have been styling lists using id's
example
#div ul
#div li
#div li a
#div li a:hover
I followed a
Felix Miata wrote:
For ideas on what people have:
http://www.codestyle.org/css/font-family/sampler-CombinedResultsFull.shtml
This is a very useful resource, Felix, but a comment
and a question :
1) The Platform icon completely passed my notice.
I am not a native speaker of Iconish, and
Ah, please forgive me : I thought it was your work.
Philip Taylor
Felix Miata wrote:
On 2010/07/15 09:25 (GMT+0100) Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd) composed:
Felix Miata wrote:
For ideas on what people have:
http://www.codestyle.org/css/font-family/sampler-CombinedResultsFull.shtml
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote:
Usually you don't even know if the user has the font activated or not... :-).
This is a little off-topic for CSS-D, but still pertinent,
so I hope the question will be acceptable to most : is
it possible, using JavaScript or otherwise, to interrogate
the DOM to
If I have a page such as the following :
!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN
http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd;
html
head
meta http-equiv=Content-Type content=text/html; charset=utf-8
titleArmenian test/title
style type=text/css
Chris Blake wrote:
Hi,
What about using CSS3 web fonts
http://www.fontsquirrel.com/fontface/generator ?
Upload the font you want, it will generate all the different types, link
to them using the @fontface thing and bingo - they don't need that font
on their system.
or am I dreadfully
Michael Adams wrote:
Would it help to create a page with all the Unicode chars in the range you are
using and ask who can see how many based on font selections on a per
paragraph basis. For *my* Linux Nimbus Roman No9 L may be a well populated
serif font and Nimbus Sans L as sans serif
Chris Blake wrote:
On 13/07/2010, at 6:38 PM, Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd) wrote:
[T]he CSS fallback mechanism was formulated at a time when Unicode
was not yet prevalent, and does not seem to have evolved to
cope with the need to have greater control over the fallback
font selected
Michael Adams wrote:
On Tuesday 13 July 2010 23:02, Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd) wrote:
I think that there is a great deal of unintentional racism in
the US-English-centric web that we use today, but the last time
a group of us tried to raise this as a serious issue within the
CSS
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote:
A modern OS / browser will do the job for you. [snip]
Thank you, Phillipe : a very interesting summary. It is
certainly useful to know what the behaviour of most current
rendering engines is, but of course unless it is actually
enshrined in the specification, one
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote:
What I describe is actually the expected behaviour per CSS 2.1 /3-fonts…
OK, even better news :-) Very many thanks.
** Phil.
__
css-discuss [cs...@lists.css-discuss.org]
Tim Climis wrote:
http://www.uselessgeography.com/
The masthead graphic (and perhaps other elements)
doesn't/don't scale with Ctrl +/-, so unfortunately
horizontal scrolling is forced above a fairly modest
degree of zoom.
Philip Taylor
fantasai wrote:
Was there something else you wanted?
Dear Fantasai : many thanks for demonstrating that I was
incorrect in my belief that the font-fallback mechanism
has not evolved over time; I am extremely pleased that
this is the case. As to whether there is anything else
in this area
MEM wrote:
Well, here I would say, that I will be very angry as well, but on one
condition, if, for some reason, it was important to have (for
cross-data proposes or something else), access to both information at
the same time.
I cannot see a reason for doing so on this context. (that
Chris Blake wrote:
Yes, I am sure it's not w3c compliant at the moment but I
will look into that if I can get things working. It might be a bit
backwards but 6 errors isn't too many,
Dear Chris -- With the greatest respect, one error is too
many, not for reasons of pedantry but simply
Oh, that is /desperately/ slow, Márcio : 23 seconds
to complete loading. I am afraid I wouldn't be
willing to wait that long in the real world. I really
think you need to reduce the complexity and increase
the efficiency.
Philip Taylor
MEM wrote:
I would like to request your help,
OK, again not an answer to your real problem, Márcio,
but as a visitor I would expect to be able to click
on the + sign, not on the text, in order to expand
the view.
Philip Taylor
MEM wrote:
Yes. :( I'm thinking about ajax, and image size reduction.
Maybe that will do it.
But apart
Chris F.A. Johnson wrote:
Why XHTML?
If a DIV isn't closed, it's not valid [X]HTML; it should get a
failing grade.
The classes and IDs can be used later when the CSS is modified.
I have to say, I'm more-or-less with Chris on this one. An unclosed
DIV is no better and no
MEM wrote:
Thanks for point out some issues here and there, they are more then
welcome. :) I have a life to learn about this. :D
OK, then another one :-)
When I click on the first +, it expands (reveals) that region;
when I click on the second +, it expands (reveals) that region;
but when I
MEM wrote:
Yes. :) The reason why we cannot have all expanded it's because, if we
have all expanded the portfolio 100% height cool effect is lost.
OK, but will your visitors think it cool ? Or would they prefer
to have control over what is concealed and what is revealed. As
one potential
Brian M. Curran wrote:
My question is: So, why does the image with the box that it sits in seem to
be within the div? Shouldn't my CSS or HTML fail to validate, because of an
overflow problem?
No. Validation is concerned with syntax, not with semantics.
Philip Taylor
I really think that before anyone gets too enthusiastic
about jumping on the HTML 5 bandwagon, they should take
a step back and consider some of the problems that are
emerging. I would recommend taking a considered read
of the following :
With list-style-type: decimal, and within an
unordered list, I would like to be able to
specify the list-style-value, but no such
property seems to exist. Is there a well-
known solution to this problem, please ?
Philip Taylor
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote:
generated content ?
Someone sent me this example page a few days ago:
http://timmychristensen.com/css-ordered-list-numbering-examples.html
Or else: html5 has a start attribute, last I checked.
http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/grouping-content.html#the-ol-element
David Laakso wrote:
This:
html {
font-family : Trebuchet MS, Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif;
font-size: 80%;
}
Becomes this [user friendly and shorter]:
html {
font : 100%/1.4 Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
}
With the greatest respect, your dislike for the fonts which
Microsoft
Hoyd Breton wrote:
Matthew + Chris: Thank you for the quick replies. Yeap, I agree that in most
cases animations tend to be on the annoying/ pointless side of things;
however, I feel like slideshows have become a bit commonplace on portfolio
sites, going to give it a try and nix if it's
Hoyd Breton wrote:
Thanks for all the pennies, nickels and dimes. Cashing it all in. = ]
I wanted to avoid the SWF route, not because all the hoopla but more as an
exercise to learn the javascript ropes a bit.
Good man : Flash ? Just say 'NO !' :-)
http://starkshumble.com/test/
I like
Duane Nelson wrote:
I'm of the validation persuasion, because I lack the theory behind CSS
and HTML. By validating my code, which I learned I need to do from this
list, I have a foundation to fix the display behavior. This PNG fix
only affected IE browsers below version 6. I tried a new
Stéphane Carnot wrote:
Hi Chris,
Sorry, i was on holidays :-)
First, thanks for your help.
But it doesn't help much.
I'm trying to use the 'page-break-inside : avoid'. The page-break-after is
not what i'm looking for.
OK, you have test files, but we (or at least, I)
still do not know
Jeff Zeitlin wrote:
I 'edit' (for loose values of the word 'edit') a monthly PDF magazine.
When a new issue is released, the articles from the previous issue
become viewable on the magazine's website.
[snip]
I'm reluctant to do major hacking on the HTML; I'd prefer to stick to
just
Tom Livingston wrote:
Having an issue with Safari 4 Mac and a mystery space above the text
Footer on this page:
http://proof.mlinc.com/mlinc.com/testpages/6-10/index.html
I see no text footer at all : here is a screen capture,
[suppressed for list] from Seamonkey 2.0.4 under Windows/XP
Liz Butler wrote:
http://newsite.herb-pharm.com/shopping/shopping/19/online-store.html
http://newsite.herb-pharm.com/products/products/18/our-products.html
- there seems to be a display problem with the main menu with firefox on
windows
It looks to me (without looking into the code)
To save your visitors from having to horizontal-scroll
(which most of them will hate), why not stack the last
two images vertically instead of horizontally ?
Philip Taylor
John wrote:
http://www.coffeeonmars.com/dez.html
David Laakso wrote:
Verdana was ditched because it is pug ugly -- particularly at default or
greater than default.
How do you feel about Tahoma ? I prefer it to Verdana, and normally work
at greater-than-default sizes.
Philip Taylor
Linda Miller, DVM wrote:
Perhaps I am misreading this?
http://www.css3.info/preview/border-image/
It mentions in the list border-top-image
Personally speaking, I wouldn't recommend trusting any
web page concerning W3C recommendations unless it comes
from a W3C server. There are,
appreciate any help anyone can provide. Thanks.
--
Travis Crabtree
Webmaster
Tusculum College
phone: 423.636.7300 ext. 5132
fax: 423.636.7492
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
__
css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED
played around with the sizes, but I fear the
problem goes deeper than that. I simply don't know enough about IE6 to know how
to fix the problem. I would be very grateful for any help. Thanks.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Webmaster
Sent
of it, so there is no gap.
Both the CSS and the HTML files are large, and I apologize for that. Once I get
the page displaying properly, I plan to break out the javascript and the
drop-down lists. I greatly appreciate any help you can provide. Thank you.
--
Travis Crabtree
Webmaster
Tusculum
Viewing it with Firefox 2.0.0.12 on Windows Vista Business.
From: vincent pollard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2008 11:21 AM
To: Webmaster
Cc: css-d@lists.css-discuss.org
Subject: Re: [css-d] Need help with IMG inside a DIV
it looks fine on my machine. what are you
work
either. How do I make the DIV expand to contain the image? I always seem to
have problems with images. Can someone show me where I went wrong? I greatly
appreciate your help.
--
Travis Crabtree
Webmaster
Tusculum College
phone: 423.636.7300 ext. 5132
fax: 423.636.7492
email: [EMAIL
of the CSS and the simplicity of this
problem, but I appreciate any help. Thanks.
--
Travis Crabtree
Webmaster
Tusculum College
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css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED
I am having trouble positioning the text inside the div. Maybe I have the
wrong markup?
HTML -
http://oit.sfasu.edu/test/frame2.html
CSS -
http://oit.sfasu.edu/test/template.css
Thanks - Travis Killen
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css-discuss [EMAIL
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