I have a 2 pixel wide page border that needs to maintain its autostretched
limit to the browser window, as it gets filled with content. The code I've
supplied below *apparently* does what's needed in IE6. It doesn't work
the same with Firefox 2.0. Resizing the browser window behaves expectedly in
b
The only way to identify relevant comments/complaints/issues is for people
to get mad.
This happened only recently with Mister Wong and the view expressed by an
American Chinese minority about racial slurs. The management at Wong agreed
it was an issue and took action. The exact same conditions ap
ADMIN - THREAD CLOSED
Yes, it is annoying, and something we are looking into.
However, we have requested, MANY TIMES, that you make you
comments/complaints/issues known to memberhelp rather than to the entire
list - as all you do is aggravate the situation.
If issues - send to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Guys,
We have asked that meta discussion go directly to the admin group,
rather than bogging down the list.
That said - while I agree with the sentiment, it is a software based
problem.
At the moment we are receiving generous free service from webboy.
Webboy uses particular technologies and wi
Agree...
-Mensagem original-
De: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Em nome
de Alvaro Mouriño
Enviada em: quinta-feira, 16 de agosto de 2007 15:25
Para: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Assunto: Re: [WSG] Out of Office AutoReply: WSG Digest
On 8/16/07, Chris Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
On 8/16/07, Chris Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My point is, there must be a software solution to this in the mailing list
> software. Yahoo must be filtering these messages, no? Isn't there a better
> mousetrap here, rather than expecting thousands of members to remember to
> edit their
You know, I belong to perhaps two dozen email lists, and this one and one
other are the only ones plagued with the "oof" (out of office) notice
problem. Yahoo groups, in particular seem to have this well under control.
I am on something like ten Yahoo groups, with thousands of members across
them,
I will be out of the office on Thursday 08/16/07 and Friday 08/17/07. I will
be back in the office on Monday 06/20/07.
I will be on vacation and not checking email or voicemail during this time. I
will respond to all emails when I return.
Thanks,
Pete
*
On 16/08/07, Keryx Web <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> CSS considers only element nodes to be children or siblings. The DOM
> does not.
Actually, selectors considers ONLY elements, never text nodes or
entity references (or comments, or PIs, or CDATA blocks or whatever).
Selectors work on the element
Anders Nawroth skrev:
You are looking for thead/tbody HTML elements:
No, I want to stop the leftmost *column* from scrolling as well!
Lars Gunther
***
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Hi again!
CSS considers only element nodes to be children or siblings. The DOM
does not.
This is a pedagogic discrepancy understandable to people used in
traversing the DOM who are frustrated that MSIE is "natural" with
nextSibling and that the rest are according to spec.[1] Something that
Steve Green wrote:
The http://www.fosterandpartners.com is not a good example at all. I can see
at a glance that it violates at least three WCAG Priority 2 checkpoints, and
that's without even looking at the code. Some pages violate Priority 1
requirements too.
That's a shame because I really ne
Hi Steve,
Thanks for the reply.
/* "Explain to them how much more money they can make..." */
My apologies, I should have stated that employing web standards and
accessibility will give them the _ability_ or _enhance their opportunity_ to
reach a larger audience and thus improve their chances of
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