trevor bayliss wrote:
> All the columns seem to have moved right for some reason. Why is this
> happening? How can I correct it? I am learning css so I would be
> interested to hear if I am approaching this from the right angle- two
> divs for example would it have been better as divs? TIA
> h
Yeah, I fixed it. I changed the width to 100% and used overflow on
the containing element. Worked like a charm.
On 9/7/07, Richard Grevers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 9/6/07, Daniel Talsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > It's hard for me to know if my note is posting to the list or not,
> > s
Hi all, I want to put two columns inside the divs:
#wrapper {
float : left;
width : 100%;
margin-left : -180px;
padding-top : 15px;
}
#content {
margin-left : 180px;
width : 743px;
}
which I have done with and
#contentinleft {
margin-left : 180px;
width : 500px;
float: left;
}
Michael Forker wrote:
> Hi
>
> havn't been on here in a whilehelloI am an Interactive Multimedia
> design student...havn't that much experience with CSS and I am having a go
> at doing my first site for a clientthe problem is that with the layout
> in the pages when I put content in
Mike,
I suggest you look on the CSS-Discuss wiki at
http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=AnyColumnLongest
Also, when you post, I suggest that you limit the use
of "...". The URL to your website was broken because
of them.
Regards,
Scott Povlot
--- Michael Forker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
Hiep,
You may be able do to this in CSS if you restrict the
format to fixed width fonts with text only.
This may work for a dot matrix printer. But for
anything that requires specific layout such as laser
print multi-column labels, I would suggest looking
into a server-side solution that creates
On 9/7/07, Rick Lecoat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Also, do any of the others have anything that compares to FF's web
> developer toolbar?
>
Opera (9+) has the developer console which you will find under
tools/advanced/developer tools (but I put a button on a toolbar to
launch it). It is still in
On 9/6/07, Daniel Talsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It's hard for me to know if my note is posting to the list or not,
> since it's not getting mailed to me. If it is getting posted, but
> it's just not attractive for people to answer, could someone do me the
> favor of responding and just letti
Rafael wrote:
> I wonder, do you have an example of validated XHTML markup that's not
> "perfect"? I.e. markup that, although validated, it's broken XHTML?
> Personally, it's all I do, validated as XHTML Strict (after all,
> that's why I'm writing).
I don't have a list of valid but not working XH
Rafael wrote:
> Hi,
> I have a limited knowledge on the different bugs out there, so I
> would like to know what problems would cause a more conservative
> structure for this problem, such as
> http://dev.rsalazar.name/css.d/report.html
>
> I just did it as an exercise (so I started
At 8:35 AM -0700 9/7/07, Alan Gresley wrote:
>Indeed off topic and drifting into holy war territory in ways of markup.
Quite so. Now is the time to end the thread.
We're here to discuss ways of using CSS, not which markup flavor
is better or worse than another. Yes, the use of markup i
One could argue that a bunch of links (as in your example) could properly be
considered tabular data (so what if they also work as links - each one is a
chunk of information, "data," and they need to be grouped together in a logical
way, even if only on one row) and therefore be presented in an
This page (
http://www.westciv.com/style_master/academy/css_tutorial/advanced/printing.html)
has almost everything about printing control in CSS.
Hope this helps
On 9/7/07, Hiep Nguyen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> hi there,
>
> i hope this is the right list to ask this question.
>
> i'm writing
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
> Tigdh Glesain wrote
>> Am I worrying unnecessarily? Do any of have any 'jeez' to go with my
>> 'whine'? (O:
>>
>
> You have good reasons to worry if your work either isn't up to _perfect_
> XHTML standard from the very start, or someone else may lower its
> quality in
Geoffrey Sneddon wrote:
> On 7 Sep 2007, at 16:44, Rafael wrote:
>> # XHTML *does* promote more separation of content and presentation that
>> HTML does, since it doesn't allow most of the presentational attributes
>> anymore (e.g "align") and some of the presentation tags (e.g. "font").
>
> HTML 4
Hi
havn't been on here in a whilehelloI am an Interactive Multimedia
design student...havn't that much experience with CSS and I am having a go
at doing my first site for a clientthe problem is that with the layout
in the pages when I put content into the various pages differing on
Hi,
I have a limited knowledge on the different bugs out there, so I
would like to know what problems would cause a more conservative
structure for this problem, such as
http://dev.rsalazar.name/css.d/report.html
I just did it as an exercise (so I started from scratch), but it
see
Thought you might find this of interest.
http://tjkdesign.com/articles/make_an_html_list_look_like_a_table.asp
--
E. Michael Brandt
www.divaHTML.com
divaPOP : standards-compliant popup windows
divaGPS : you-are-here menu highlighting
divaFAQ : FAQ pages with pizazz
www.valleywebdesigns.com
Jus
Cynthia Page wrote:
> I am experimenting with layout for divs containing images and text. The outer
> div will go inside a three column layout.
>
> My question concerns floating and clearing images in divs, nested within a
> floating div.
>
> Should I float an image left and clear right to make
Tigdh Glesain wrote:
> http://www.webdevout.net/articles/beware-of-xhtml#what_is_xhtml
Since the quality of the mark-up is crucial for CSS to work, I have no
problems discussing the issue here on css-d.
However: the issue is about technical conformance and practical use
(serving) of XHTML, so opi
On 7 Sep 2007, at 16:44, Rafael wrote:
> Hi, Ta!
>
> I'm not sure what you're talking about when you mention "the
> forked-code wars", but chances are you're worrying unnecessarily.
>
> As far as I see, he's only trying to get people actually
> understand
> what XHTML is, and the di
Tigdh Glesain wrote:
> Hallo Folks,
>
> I am just a little foncused. This may seem like an 'off-topic'
> subject, but I think I'm correct in saying it effects the way in
> which we code our CSS to a degree. If this topic has been covered
> before, then I apologise and would ask for a pointer tow
Hi, Ta!
I'm not sure what you're talking about when you mention "the
forked-code wars", but chances are you're worrying unnecessarily.
As far as I see, he's only trying to get people actually understand
what XHTML is, and the differences it has against HTML, though I have a
somewha
hi there,
i hope this is the right list to ask this question.
i'm writing a simple web application using mysql & php. what i want is to
do allow users to print continuous label (7.5x3.5 in) on dot matrix
printer.
my question is can css do this? If so, can some one gives some advises or
poin
Here's the test page:
http://www.fjordaan.net/tests/nav-test.html
(Table-based top, list-based bottom)
I've been doing CSS-based layouts for 5 years, but I just can't get a
standards-based approach to work as well as a table for this horizontal
navbar. This is the best I can get it.
This is a liq
>
> I'm having a bit of a problem here. For some reason the red square
> bullet before "About" won't show up in IE, however the bullet for
> "Career and Education" shows up fine. Any suggestions?
>
> Below is the markup and the css:
> http://www.liquidscience.net/andrew/testercopy.html
> http://w
On 9/6/07, patrick mattison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'm having a bit of a problem here. For some reason the red square
> bullet before "About" won't show up in IE, however the bullet for
> "Career and Education" shows up fine. Any suggestions?
>
> Below is the markup and the css:
> http://ww
On 07/09/2007 15:06, Cynthia Page wrote:
> Also is it appropriate to ask such a basic question on this list?
Absolutely. We have all levels of experience on the list.
--
http://antanova.blogspot.com
__
css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECT
I am experimenting with layout for divs containing images and text. The outer
div will go inside a three column layout.
My question concerns floating and clearing images in divs, nested within a
floating div.
Should I float an image left and clear right to make the text stay to the right
of t
At 12:01 PM +0100 9/7/07, Rick Lecoat wrote:
>Can anyone tell me what the *most* standards-compliant browser is (I
>would assume that it would be one of either FF, Opera or Safari)?
No, not any more. Once upon a time that kind of thing was pretty
easy to figure out, but it's much too diffic
Thanks guys,
somehow I am inclined to solve it that way, but hearing it from other
developers is just refreshing and adds confidence that I'll solve this
the right way and less time.
Thanks for sharing your wisdom and experience
Rey
On 9/7/07, Ross Hulford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Take Nick
On 7/9/07 (11:10) Ross said:
>ALWAYS start with Firefox as your testing browser!
I'm straying dangerously close to the forbidden world of 'browser wars'
here, I know, but in the context of the previous advice, I have a
genuine, non-opinionated question.
I also follow the practice of using a stan
On 4/18/07, Big John <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Rowan wrote:
>
> > A visitor of www.stichting-ecosafe.org told me that when he hovers over
> the
> > menu of that website, the whole menu disappears. I'm assuming he's using
> > some version of Internet Explorer to which I don't have access, becau
Take Nicks' advice:
- ALWAYS start with Firefox as your testing browser!
- if you have alignment probmlems (probably a few double float and width
bugs) make a css file for ie6 and use the conditionals (put this below all
your other css links)
No more headaches just perfct cross-browser pages
> I have a project which we started designing for IE6, then proceeded to
> demo on IE7 compatability, which broke most of the IE6
> compatabilities.
>
> Now, I have to make the design cross browser (IE6, IE7 and Firefox).
> I'm sure I can do these with a lot of time (and right frame of mind)
> but
Jason Das wrote:
> After years of css+standards+"tables must die"purity I started using
> tables again for certain specific layout issues.
>
> I tend to favor less code. So if I can do something instantly with a
> table that would take many extra lines of containing blocks and css,
> (not to
Can someone see why Firefox 2 displays what I would like and IE 6 pushes
"Knowledge is power" and everything else under my tree logo?
HTML: http://www.infoforce-services.com
CSS: http://www.infoforce-services.com/css/layout.css
--
Love Hayden (Super Duper Guide Dog)and
The harness attachmen
On 6/9/07 (22:02) Nancy said:
>I recently went through this. What helped me was realizing that
>if
>color:#00 !important; color:#ff !ie; color:#cc;
>then
>Firefox is black, IE7 is white, IE6 is gray
Nancy:
Very interesting. Is that "!ie" something official introduced by IE7, or
was
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