Tim Ware wrote:
[...]
we *definitely* need to lock down the file size for the navigation or
it breaks the design.
[...]
Hi Tim,
After all (not working/accessible solutions: fixed fonts, images,
imagemaps with tables and spacers, no site, etc.): Back To Question. ;-)
Are you 100% sure the
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
Dave Goodchild wrote:
... And if you use px users cannot resize text in IE.
Correct, but IE-users can /ignore/ text-size, regardless of which unit is
used.
Georg
And it is my understanding that IE7 will include a Zoom function that works
like Opera's where everything on
How can I specify a font size that's bulletproof as regards
increasing the browser's text size?
View your page at normal font size, take a screenshot of it, and write
the following code:
html
img src=page.jpg alt=sorry, you can't use my webpage
/html
and add an image map.
I'll just feel
I'll just feel sorry for the site's visitors. For an example of this
technique, see http://www.hotbagelcompany.com (a local bagel shop here
that I'm actually quite fond of)
Yikes!
--
Tom Livingston
Senior Multimedia Artist
Media Logic
www.mlinc.com
Kenny replied:
How can I specify a font size that's bulletproof as regards
increasing the browser's text size?
View your page at normal font size, take a screenshot of it, and write
the following code:
html
img src=page.jpg alt=sorry, you can't use my webpage
/html
and add an
I'll just feel sorry for the site's visitors.
Me too... but I have a feeling we've left the CSS-base for this list by
now :-)
For an example of this technique, see http://www.hotbagelcompany.com
(a local bagel shop here that I'm actually quite fond of)
Looks, and works, especially
BTW: do anyone around here test their layouts in Lynx?
I always start on that level, as it provides me with the most
well-working base for subsequent styling.
I disable styles and images in firefox. I think the default styles
show what's what better than lynx can.
Why not just use px? pt should be restricted to print. Also, if the user
wants to resize the text they can, that's not your call unless you use px
values and the user is using IE.
On 15/05/06, Tim Ware [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, I know it's frowned upon, but I'm coding a site for a client/
Tim Ware wrote:
How can I specify a font size that's bulletproof as regards
increasing the browser's text size?
Tim
Pick your poison:
1/ html, body {display: none; }the navigation will not break, nor qwill
anything else. Of course no one will be able to see or use the site, but
what
On 15/05/06, David Laakso [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Tim Ware wrote:
How can I specify a font size that's bulletproof as regards
increasing the browser's text size?
Tim
Indeed. And if you use px users cannot resize text in IE.
On 5/15/06, Tim Ware [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, I know it's frowned upon,
Not merely frowned upon but in fact, strictly speaking, actually not possible.
we *definitely* need to lock down the file size for the navigation or
it breaks the design.
You can define the font-sizes in pixels
On 06/05/15 15:30 (GMT-0400) Tim Ware apparently typed:
Yes, I know it's frowned upon, but I'm coding a site for a client/
designer and persuaded them to use CSS/HTML for their navigation, but
we *definitely* need to lock down the file size for the navigation or
it breaks the design. I've
Dave Goodchild wrote:
... And if you use px users cannot resize text in IE.
Correct, but IE-users can /ignore/ text-size, regardless of which unit
is used.
Georg
--
http://www.gunlaug.no
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