I'm having some browser incompatabilities - I can't get the nav bar
to appear correctly.
Here's the URL: http://studentweb.usq.edu.au/home/w0011373
(CSS at
http://studentweb.usq.edu.au/home/w0011373/assets/css/main-
style.css)
I'm expecting popup submenus and the nav bar to be positioned in
the
Thanks Patrick and Steven.
If by Mac you mean OS X, rather than OS 9, have a look at this
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/unix_open_source/lynx.html
The download link is broken, I'd been trying it since yesterday. I thought
maybe server was down yesterday, but it looks more like the
Cole Kuryakin - x7m wrote:
So...will *{margin: 0 padding:0} in the HTML or Body declaration block zero
the margin and padding properties for all child elements in one go?
For all elements, yes (not just child elements, written like that).
I've
never seen the * used before.
It's called the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm having some browser incompatabilities - I can't get the nav bar
to appear correctly.
Here's the URL: http://studentweb.usq.edu.au/home/w0011373
(CSS at
http://studentweb.usq.edu.au/home/w0011373/assets/css/main-
style.css)
I'm expecting popup submenus and the
Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
Cole Kuryakin - x7m wrote:
So...will *{margin: 0 padding:0} in the HTML or Body declaration
block zero
the margin and padding properties for all child elements in one go?
For all elements, yes (not just child elements, written like that).
Additionally, the
On 6/17/05, Cole Kuryakin - x7m [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So...will *{margin: 0 padding:0} in the HTML or Body declaration block zero
the margin and padding properties for all child elements in one go? I've
never seen the * used before.
Something you may also want to remember is the immense
... and finally finds a few minutes to post!
Tuesday's Brisbane meeting was great!
Tania Lang of Peak Usability and the Brisbane CHI SIG dropped by to
introduce herself and fill us in the SIG and World Usability Day on
November 3 - sounds good. Brisbane is hosting a 1/2 day seminar
entitled
On 17/06/2005, at 10:01 PM, Lea de Groot wrote:
August will see us avidly listening to John Bates talking to us about
Internationalisation (geez, no wonder it is routinely abbreviated to
'i18n'!).
I've been told it's shortened for two reasons:
Firstly, it's much easier to type.
Secondly,
Hello,
What is the recommended way to mark up a list that has a title? Normally
I do:
pFeatures:/p
ul
liIt's big/li
liIt's heavy/li
liIt's wood/li
/ul
Is there a better way to do that?
Chris.
**
The discussion list for
Hi Chris,
Personally I'd use a header of an appropriate level within the document. So:
h1Document Title/h2
pBlah blah blah blah/p
h2List Title/h2
ul
liIt's big/li
etc...
/ul
Cheers,
Iain
Chris W. Parker wrote:
Hello,
What is the recommended way to mark up a list that has
What is the recommended way to mark up a list that has a title?
With better IE support, I might do:
ul title=Features
liIt's big/li
liIt's heavy/li
liIt's wood/li
/ul
...and then style it something like:
ul[title]:before {
display:block;
content:attr(title);
}
But, as
First, Firefox still allows the user to increase the font size if pixels
are used. Second, font size is a much debated topic, and I think it's
rather presumptious to infer that those of us who use pixels wallow in
mediocrity.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I do teach the students about em, keywords
I'm trying to create easy-to-follow guidelines for my team. Regarding
alt, title, and longdesc attributes for img tags, I'd like to know if
my summary below could use some correcting. Also, URLs of concise
guidelines on the matter would be appreciated.
1. When possible, images that are not
tee wrote:
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/unix_open_source/lynx.html
The download link is broken, I'd been trying it since yesterday. I thought
maybe server was down yesterday, but it looks more like the osxgnu.org site
and its ftp no long exist.
Works absolutely fine for me. Even
Chris W. Parker wrote:
pFeatures:/p
ul
liIt's big/li
liIt's heavy/li
liIt's wood/li
/ul
At the risk of sparking another cry of outrage and subsequent
discussions, you could use the (badly defined) definition list construct
instead:
dl
dtFeatures:/dt
ddIt's big/dd
ddIt's heavy/dd
*Huge* fan as I am of definition lists, I fear this may be taking it
just that little bit too far. ;) Chris is, after all, marking up a
list title. A definition title and its subsequent definition suggests a
much tighter and narrow scope than a general title gives.
Whoops, here comes the
Looks like a pretty good set of guidelines to me =).
The stuff and nonsense foot notes idea is a good one, which also works
for providing inline help instead of using pop-up windows.
regards
Terrence Wood.
On 18 Jun 2005, at 6:07 AM, Ben Curtis wrote:
I'm trying to create easy-to-follow
Iain mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
on Friday, June 17, 2005 1:28 PM said:
*Huge* fan as I am of definition lists, I fear this may be taking it
just that little bit too far. ;) Chris is, after all, marking up a
list title. A definition title and its subsequent definition
suggests a much
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