Hi All
Been lurking for a while and finally got round to posting. So here goes;
One advantage of the unordered list approach would be that you can
eliminate quite a bit of your code (moving it to the css), as well as it
being maybe more semantically correct (it is a 'list' of links after all).
Thank you very much. I will take a look.
Sure sounds like it, though I hope I don't have to purchase the
article..
ByteDreams
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of csslistSent:
Saturday, February 05, 2005 9:58 PMTo:
wsg@webstandardsgroup.orgSubject: re: [WSG]
I am still struggling with the list indenting, I have started building
my page from scratch piece by piece and it seems when I change the
position attribute from absolute to relative the list indents, anyone
ever come across this before ?
Page for reference: http://www.speakupnow.ca/wu/index1.php
Sorry to be badgering the indented list but I have just put only the
lists into my container and have the same properties for both lists,
just different names, yet one indents and one does not. Anyone, anyone ?
Page for reference: http://www.speakupnow.ca/wu/index1.php
Ha ha,
Paul
-Original
On 2/7/05 8:14 AM, Paul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry to be badgering the indented list but I have just put only the
lists into my container and have the same properties for both lists,
just different names, yet one indents and one does not. Anyone, anyone ?
Page for reference:
nice work :o)
you can get a badge!
http://images.google.com/images?q=w3c+validationimgsz=iconhl=enlr=ie=UTF
-8rls=GGLC,GGLC:1970-01,GGLC:enstart=20sa=N
:o)
R
- Original Message -
From: Brendan Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Friday, February 04, 2005 7:21
https://monitor.hpa.com.au/rta/
Strange... looks fine in Firefox 0.9.3 (Mac OSX) but in IE5.2, it's
completely unstyled!
Regards,
Jonathan Cooper
Manager of Information / Website
Art Gallery of New South Wales
Sydney, Australia
http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au
- Original Message -
Perfect, Thanks Sarah!
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Sarah Wedde
Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2005 4:20 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] List Indenting
On 2/7/05 8:14 AM, Paul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry to be
Hi,
I am in the process of building a template for a page of search results. The
rest of the website is XHTML Strict so I'm having to code it this way.
Had I been doing it with HTML Transitional or similar, I would have displayed a
second page of results as follows:
ol start=11liFirst result/li
Andreas Boehmer wrote:
But it seems you cannot manually
enter HEX codes?
you can now!
with regards
Steven Faulkner
Web Accessibility Consultant
National Information Library Service (NILS)
454 Glenferrie Road
Kooyong Victoria 3144
Phone: (613) 9864 9281
Fax: (613) 9864 9210
Email: [EMAIL
Ian Fenn wrote:
Had I been doing it with HTML Transitional or similar, I would have displayed a
second page of results as follows:
ol start=11liFirst result/li
liSecond.../li
...
/ol
Do you have any suggestions as to how I could achieve a similar effect with
XHTML Strict? I was thinking of using
Your :hover changes on menus create a contrast shift that is far too small.
In short, make the :hover background lighter and text darker so we can
still read the menu :)
On Fri, 4 Feb 2005 19:21:31 +1100, Brendan Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greetings all,
I'm currently working on a web
Hello,
I posted a few days ago, about this puzzler. Didn't get a response. I
REALLY need some help with this from you gurus.
I primarily code for Firefox, then check other browsers, then IE6. The
majority of users who will view the pages on this site are IE users,
however, the fact that I
Quoting Patrick H. Lauke [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
The painful answer is: you're supposed to do it via CSS, but
unfortunately support for counters is spotty at best...so you're left
with either reverting to transitional, or writing your own DTD.
Hmm... Thanks Patrick. Neither of these are really an
Ian Fenn wrote:
I guess I could
use a table... in this context do you think it would be acceptable?
I'd give that a tentative yes (while putting on my flame-proof piyamas),
if the number has some sort of meaning. Heck, even if it denotes order
or position I'd go with it.
table
thead
Hi Leslie
Your problem occurs when you have the border-top: 0; after the border
statement.
If you take this out, it then works the same as in other browsers, strange I
know.
Hope this helps.
Cheers
Jeff Lowder
Accessibility 1st
Ph: 02 9570 9875
Mobile: 0419 350 760
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Andreas Boehmer wrote:
But it seems you cannot manually
enter HEX codes?
you can now!
Nice, it is much more useful now.
Think this would come in handy in future development projects.
National Information Library Service (NILS)
By the way, great name ;)
Thank you!!
That is a really bizarre quirk, even more so that it works without
rendering issues popping up in the other browsers.
I shall sleep much better tonight, and have a good report for the client
in the morning. Is this a Gecko bug, I wonder?
Thanks again.
Leslie Riggs
Hi Leslie
Your
Hi
It would be better to float your list elements rather than set display
: inline; on them. inline is better for text within a paragraph -
phrase elements.
With inline, your li's will be broken up over multiple lines if the
line break (by containing box width etc) occurs within them.
f I have clear:left on something, should it escape its container
div? A lousy explanation I know, an example is here:
http://www.gfunk007.com/stuff/test.html
the results I want are like this:
http://www.gfunk007.com/stuff/expected.gif
am I missing some vital css, or can it simply not be done
Ah yes of course, cheers :) And now I see the solution, I remember I'd
already solved it for a site I did a couple of months ago :-/
On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 21:51:25 -0500, Zachary Hopkins
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hiya!
Try this: http://69.174.31.29:90/wsg/test.html
I added two divs - One that
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