Don't you, Stephen, I wondered about this after I wrote it. I kept
saying to myself, I can't be correct on this issue. How would a font
name be written otherwise?
Thanks for looking up the spec for me.
Kimi
At 12:29 PM -0400 9/3/03, Stephen Caudill wrote:
Kim Brooks Wei on Wednesday,
Joseph,
I'd like you to allow me to argue on the side of flexible sizes for a
minute. Flexible point sizes for fonts are important for usability
reasons. People who don't see well want larger sized fonts.
One of the beauty of CSS is that it gives fluidity to layouts, making
it possible for
Kim,
You have reminded me why I need those quiet hours to think it through.As
one who frequently ups the size of type in the browser your point hits home.
I find it more than irritating when I can't change a type size, nearly
always something in the 'needs a magnifying glass' category.
The
Problem isn't the semi-colon at the end though it could be the double
semi-colon. You don't call custom class using the style attribute in your
html. That is for creating inline styles where it would be:
font style=font-size: 10pt; color: #00; font-family: verdana,
sans-serif;
text-align:
For a site of laughs and a FREE ezine:
www.smilepoetryweekly.com
For cricket lovers everywhere:
Batty Balls and other Wicket Wit
www.ah-mah-son.com
- Original Message -
From: Cheryl D. Wise [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2003 3:44 PM
Subject: [wdvltalk] RE
ok Talisker this time [ remember RLS's poem?]
www.WellingtonLive.co.nz
- Original Message -
From: Joseph Harris
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2003 11:09 AM
Subject: [wdvltalk] RE: basic css!
: Many thanks for all the responses.I've been out, the net's been slow
and
: there is another