Thierry Koblentz wrote:
How does IE9 beta show these test?
http://css-class.com/test/css-testsuite/css2.1/declaration-string-
character-exscapes.htm
http://css-class.com/test/css-testsuite/css2.1/declaration-string-
character-exscapes-000.htm
These are the ones that work: 9, a, b, c, d
Ie9
On 9/15/10 8:24 PM, Keith Purtell wrote:
A typical example of a problem I'm trying to deal with is IE ignoring
max-width.- Keith Purtell
IE 7/8 support min/max.
IE/6 does not support min/max.
IE/6 is on death row.
Feed IE/6 width only [not min/max width].
#page {min-width: whatever;
On Thu, 16 Sep 2010 01:24:40 +0100, Keith Purtell
keithpurt...@keithpurtell.com wrote:
In my search for information about accommodating different browsers,
I've come across four recommended approaches:
1-Write a JavaScript to load separate style sheets.
2-Use JavaScript to write local css in
Duncan Hill wrote:
On Thu, 16 Sep 2010 01:24:40 +0100, Keith Purtell
keithpurt...@keithpurtell.com wrote:
In my search for information about accommodating different browsers,
I've come across four recommended approaches:
1-Write a JavaScript to load separate style sheets.
2-Use JavaScript to
The Problem:
--
A DropDownList rendered by ASP.Net is displayed correctly in IE8.
But, it appears as enlarged, boxed DropDownList in FireFox(Latest version).
It happens only when this DropDownList is the First control on the WebPage.
All other DropDownLists appearing as subsequent
Hi Alan,
Mmm, ok, these are the same results that I see when IE9 preview is in
IE7 document mode or when IE8 is in IE7 compatibility mode.
For IE7, /9, /a, /b, /c and /d works.
For IE8, /0, /9, /a, /b, /c and /d works.
For IE9 preview, /0 works.
Are you sure that you have IE9 beta in
The Problem:
--
A DropDownList rendered by ASP.Net is displayed correctly in IE8.
But, it appears as enlarged, boxed DropDownList in FireFox(Latest
version).
It happens only when this DropDownList is the First control on the
WebPage.
All other DropDownLists appearing as
On 9/15/10 5:24 PM, Keith Purtell wrote:
In my search for information about accommodating different browsers,
I've come across four recommended approaches:
1-Write a JavaScript to load separate style sheets.
2-Use JavaScript to write local css in the page header.
3-Use conditional comments to
Hey,
Having given the best solution to what is impossible via CSS comes Tim
with an impressive (off-list) javascript solution!
Mad props Tim!
This list has been here from day one (4yrs for me) and I am a self-
taught webmaster (lol) bordering on having a decent career. It's only
cos of
Hi Alan,
Mmm, ok, these are the same results that I see when IE9 preview is in
IE7 document mode or when IE8 is in IE7 compatibility mode.
For IE7, /9, /a, /b, /c and /d works.
For IE8, /0, /9, /a, /b, /c and /d works.
For IE9 preview, /0 works.
Interesting...
It looks like if you
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