Hi Friends,
I'm working @ Pune. Include me also, i'm a firm believer in the Web
Standards maintain those myself.
Thanks
-Sagnik
On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 10:25 AM, Naveen Bhaskar [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
hi guys
I would like to join ... I am from bangalore.
regards
naveen
i have a search form and
#formdiv{
text-align:right;
padding:3px;
padding-right:4px;
}
#formdivtext{
border:1px #BCBCBC soild;
margin-right:2px;
}
my css file is this.
But in ie7 form height is very big but in firefox height is suitable for my
claim!
what can i do to organize it?
Try resetting your page with an example such as:
* {
margin: 0px;
padding: 0px;
line-height: 1.25px;
}
etc.
Also is your browser in standards or quirks mode?
You gave a brief description and no XHTML, this may help us more.
Kyle
ok, i tried it. thank you! it is suitable a bit. But not completely.
According to you which browser is better to try web site. i rarely look my
web site in ie. is firefox enough?
2008/3/25, Kyle Hudson [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Try resetting your page with an example such as:
* {
Hi,
RE:
When I hid the del using display: hidden; the list would render
something like this
I can't say I've ever felt the need to use these tags, but isn't hiding
the content supposed to be the job of the browser/user agent - rather than
you using CSS.
On Sun, March 23, 2008 12:43 pm, Thomas
or maybe your border attribute needs a diaper? ;-)
#formdivtext{
border:1px #BCBCBC soild;
margin-right:2px;
}
Joe
On Mar 25, 2008, at 13:22, Kyle Hudson wrote:
Try resetting your page with an example such as:
* {
margin: 0px;
padding: 0px;
line-height:
Don't you mean server sided rather than browser/user agent?
/Svip
On 25/03/2008, Stuart Foulstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
RE:
When I hid the del using display: hidden; the list would render
something like this
I can't say I've ever felt the need to use these tags, but isn't
Using del and ins to track changes in a document, is making excellent
use of semantic markup. However markup should only be used to describe
content, not other markup - classes and IDs are used to describe other
markup.
CSS:
del, .del {
display: none;
/* un-comment to use */
Hi everyone,
thought I'll butt in here.
I from Amchi Mumbai.
I accidentally stumbled on Web standards as I was learning White Hat SEO,
I've been on the list for a little less than a year and have picked quite a
few useful tips.
Though I still am bad with using webstandards and still use
That would depend on what you consider significant - some of the most
irritating issues are due to relatively tiny bugs.
Safari has essentially the same codebase on both Windows and OSX, but
the OS is always going to be responsible for some functions.
For an example, consider the well-known
I don't find classes to have the semantic value as the tags have. There is
no where defined what the semanic value of classes are. Even though the
classes would share the same name as a tag I don't see it as having the same
semantic value.
- Original Message -
From: Kyle Hudson
Regardless,
Tags are there to markup content, whereas classes are used to group together
tags or markup.
Kyle
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Thomas Thomassen
Sent: 25 March 2008 16:43
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] INS
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Thomas Thomassen
Sent: Sunday, March 23, 2008 5:44 AM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: [WSG] INS and DEL in lists
I was working on some examples for the use of del and ins.
You mean removing by that I used display: none; to hide it?
That was for the particular case I worked on where I used a javascript to view
the document at various versions.
The way I see if, if I have a document where I mark up changes and one of them
changes is an item in a list, I find it
But the whole purpose was to use the semantic value of the del to tell
that the listitem was at some point removed. Classes doesn't provide that. I
don't see how grouping comes into this.
From the W3C spec:
These two elements are unusual for HTML in that they may serve as either
Thomas Thomassen skrev:
I posted a comment about it in the W3C public HTML discussion group,
hoping it'd be picked up and amend HTML5's specification to allow this.
However, there's yet been any response. Is there any other place I could
air this issue in hope of it getting heards by the
Maybe but i am is new coder :D
2008/3/25, Joseph Ortenzi [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
or maybe your border attribute needs a diaper? ;-)
#formdivtext{
border:1px #BCBCBC soild;
margin-right:2px;
}
Joe
On Mar 25, 2008, at 13:22, Kyle Hudson wrote:
Try resetting your page with an example such
For instance, you have a checklist of things to do. It could be a list of
bugs in a software you make. You have the list availible on your site so the
users of the software can see the list of issues you are working on.
As you fix bugs you remove them from the list. You mark up the list item
Thanks. Got a link to where I can follow that incase there's response?
I'm wondering if I've muddled up my explanation of the problem, by dragging
in how I discovered and such. Perhaps I should have taken some more time
explaining it more clearly? In general I feel I've been confusing people.
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