I have two floating divs #mainbar and #sidebar inside another div: #content.
When the page is rendered the content of the two floating divs is rendered
then the background colour of the #content div seems to roll-out. This
occurs in both IE 6 and Firefox 0.9 at dial-up speeds, Opera 7.52 is fine.
Recent Evolt article
Ten CSS tricks you may not know,
http://www.evolt.org/article/Ten_CSS_tricks_you_may_not_know/17/60369/index.html
You should know most of the tricks.
Tantek's peer review
http://tantek.com/log/2004/09.html#d07t1434
I found far more informative and I learnt more.
Like why
display:none has been discourages early on in the whole image
replacement discussion, as it completely hides the element
from screen readers.
Patrick
-Original Message-
From: Lorenzo Gabba @ Quirk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 08 September 2004 14:52
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:
ah... just read http://tantek.com/log/2004/09.html#d07t1434
nevermind. =P
On Wednesday 08 September 2004 15:51, Lorenzo Gabba @ Quirk wrote:
| Question |
Is this an acceptable alternative to #5 on:
http://www.evolt.org/article/Ten_CSS_tricks_you_may_not_know/17/60369/index
.html ... or will
Hi
I am looking for a flexible rounded corners (with borders) that is not
restrictive to size. Googled for some but most are filled with lots of
complex solutions (lots of html meddling and tones of css codes).
Did anyone come across something good?
Right now this page -
Hi Michael,
One thing I'd suggest if you're learning PHP is to from the very start
try as much as possible to avoid having PHP generate your HTML (as in
your example).
I started coding PHP over 4 years ago using an e-commerce system that
generated large amounts of the HTML and I still now
Couldn't agree more. One other suggestion, though, is to extend that
separation a little further by generating XML with PHP, and then parsing
that XML into whatever templating engine you end up using. This just
provides another degree of separation, and reduces the temptation to
hard-code ANY
There is an article on A List Apart that has something like that, not
sure if you have seen that one.
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/customcorners/
But I guess this has html meddling...
Tim Hill
Computer Associates
Graphic Artist
tel: +612 9937 0792
fax: +612 9937 0546
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
thanx to the WSG(bris) organisers and John Allsopp for a very
interesting presentation. I certainly got some ideas out of last night.
SO... while we wait for John to blog the resources of the presso, can
anyone remember some of the links he had?
- esp the W3C semantic viewer tool?
thanx again
Hi everyone
I am wondering if anyone knows how to change the defaults in browsers like
IE.
I recall someone showed how a user can make their default font say Arial,
10, etc with particular colour like black on white background. Its all
configured in a CSS file. So it over rides the CSS style
AssetNow NX (www.assetnow.com) - will be available October. Uses Java editor.
XHTML/CSS. Pricing will be under US$2k (for 10 editor seats). Disclosure: I am the
developer.
Johan
Original Message
From: Joseph Lindsay [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu,
Ralph wrote:
I am wondering if anyone knows how to change the defaults in browsers like
IE.
I recall someone showed how a user can make their default font say Arial,
10, etc with particular colour like black on white background. Its all
configured in a CSS file. So it over rides the CSS
Go to Tools | Internet Options and at the bottom of the General tab click
the Accessibility button and add your stylesheet there.
P
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ralph
Sent: Thursday, September 09, 2004 11:59 AM
To: [EMAIL
I second that, it was a very interesting night... Thanks guys!
...and I third (?) that motion; most enjoyable.
I've been looking for the web related design patterns that John
mentioned, not sure if I've found it though.
http://www.e-gineer.com/articles/design-patterns-in-web-programming.phtml
I imagine new versions of Contribute are pretty good (there's a demo,
why not try it out?).
It depends on how much they need to do -- if it's just basic formatting
of text, I'd say Textile[1] or Markdown[2] which are ASCI-to-XHTML
converters with simple shorthand for links, bold, italics, etc.
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