Thank you all for your quick reply and my apologies for late answer.
@David Laasko- Thank you for the pointer on working example. It works as
expected and cross browser.
@tedd- Thanks. I followed your and David's method and it helped me solve the
problem.
@David Hucklesby- This simple line
Hi!
Hope this might be useful for beginners:
http://onwebdev.blogspot.com/2010/09/css-styling-form-elements.html
HTH ^^
Gabriele Romanato
http://www.css-zibaldone.com
http://www.css-zibaldone.com/test/ (English)
http://www.css-zibaldone.com/articles/ (English)
http://onwebdev.blogspot.com/
On Saturday, September 11, 2010 6:49:33 pm Cheryl Smith wrote:
You do know that you can use server-side processing to scale images, yes?
Cordially,
David
-
Server-side processing??
Using a server side language (eg php, perl, asp, etc) to shrink images, and
save them to
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
Hi Gabriele,
Hope this might be useful for beginners:
http://onwebdev.blogspot.com/2010/09/css-styling-form-elements.html
I don't think using a UL for this makes sense.
If you want to wrap every label/input pair then why not using DIVs? Isn't
what they are for?
--
Regards,
Thierry
On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 5:25 AM, Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd)
p.tay...@rhul.ac.uk wrote:
Sorry, an irrepressible urge to be pendatic forces me
to opine that ASP is a technology, not a language.
I have an irrepressible urge to conclude you must have meant pedantic.
-- Francesco
On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 9:32 AM, Sandy Feldman sa...@sandyfeldman.com wrote:
ok, every now and then I laugh out loud at something on the list ...
thanks!
Sandy
Me too, Sandy! And now I have an irrepressible urge for a delicious
breakfast sandwich to accompany my fresh coffee.
--
Firefox in Linux does not implement bicubic resampling of scaled images. It
instead uses nearest-neighbor resampling. This is a known issue and,
unfortunately, there is no workaround. Here are two links where the issue is
discussed:
http://www.bowenhouse.org/
This looks fine in the other browsers
I need a fix for IE that doesn't break the other browsers.
Thanks,
Carol
__
css-discuss [cs...@lists.css-discuss.org]
On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 10:31 AM, Thierry Koblentz n...@tjkdesign.com wrote:
Hope this might be useful for beginners:
http://onwebdev.blogspot.com/2010/09/css-styling-form-elements.html
I don't think using a UL for this makes sense.
If you want to wrap every label/input pair then why not
http://chmackellar.ehclients.com/printable_catalog
I am making a print version of the above web page. If you go to this page and
click print, then view a preview of the page, you will see that there is a ton
of space right under the collection header, making most of the first page
blank. Does
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 20:33:52 +0100, Carol Swinehart
c...@ckfswebservices.com wrote:
http://www.bowenhouse.org/
This looks fine in the other browsers
I need a fix for IE that doesn't break the other browsers.
Thanks,
Carol
Try removing:
position:absolute;
margin-left:560px;
from your
http://chmackellar.ehclients.com/printable_catalog
I am making a print version of the above web page.
If you go to this page and click print, then view a
preview of the page, you will see that there is a
ton of space right under the collection header,
making most of the first page
This works much better than fiddling with the top padding on the p tag.
However i don't understand positioning very well apart from floats.
So just to clarify for me:
Position relative on the footer div - what's it relative too?
Why do we add a 0 on the absolute position.
Does bottom not mean
On 9/21/10 2:37 PM, Beth Lee wrote:
http://chmackellar.ehclients.com/printable_catalog
I am making a print version of the above web page. If you go to
this page and click print, then view a preview of the page, you
will see that there is a ton of space right under the
collection header,
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