On 13 Sep 2007, at 23:09, S.R. Emerson wrote:
Is there a particular reason you have specified XHTML?
So it is upgradeable for the future.
Well ... HTML 5 is being developed so XHTML is likely not the future,
converting from HTML 4.01 to XHTML 1.0 isn't difficult anyway, and
Appendix C
On 14 Sep 2007, at 10:37, David Little wrote:
Well ... HTML 5 is being developed so XHTML is likely not the future,
I was under the impression that you'll also be able to write HTML 5
in XHTML syntax (as XHTML 5, obviously different from XHTML 2 which
is a different concept?).
They are
Well ... HTML 5 is being developed so XHTML is likely not the future,
I was under the impression that you'll also be able to write HTML 5 in XHTML
syntax (as XHTML 5, obviously different from XHTML 2 which is a different
concept?). This might not be the case of course -- could anyone shed any
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
ben van 't ende [netcreators] wrote:
Wow! Gunlaug. Amazing I knew there had to be a solution. I am still
wondering why this works. Isn't CSS wonderous?
Yes, CSS can be wondrous at times.
A block-element occupy space to the outside of its margins. Floats are
no
David Dorward wrote:
I was under the impression that you'll also be able to write HTML 5
in XHTML syntax (as XHTML 5, obviously different from XHTML 2 which
is a different concept?).
They are still planning this, but the point is that HTML is not dead,
(real) XHTML is still badly supported
ben van 't ende [netcreators] wrote:
http://www.gunlaug.no/tos/moa_16.html
The only thing is ie6 crashes on resizing. That is a weird
phenomenon. Not much you can do about that i guess.
Probably a whole lot if I could isolate the IE6/OS/service-pack
combination - with settings - the crash
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
ben van 't ende [netcreators] wrote:
http://www.gunlaug.no/tos/moa_16.html
The only thing is ie6 crashes on resizing. That is a weird
phenomenon. Not much you can do about that i guess.
Probably a whole lot if I could isolate the IE6/OS/service-pack
combination -
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
ben van 't ende [netcreators] wrote:
http://www.gunlaug.no/tos/moa_16.html
The only thing is ie6 crashes on resizing. That is a weird
phenomenon. Not much you can do about that i guess.
Probably a whole lot if I could isolate the IE6/OS/service-pack
combination - with
Hello,
I'm looking for pointers towards tutorials on how to make a form look
prettier; especially the selectbox/pulldown and checkboxes are of
interest.
Thanks for any help,
Maarten
***
List Guidelines:
Yes, but it's nowhere near completion or indeed absolute that it will go
ahead anyway.
So, there's no point in lowering your standards until you have to.
On Fri, September 14, 2007 10:14 am, David Dorward wrote:
Well ... HTML 5 is being developed so XHTML is likely not the future,
converting
As I recall those are controlled by the operating system so if you using
MAC they will look nice shiny blue etc, hope that helped
M. Jama
big:interactive
91 Princedale Road
Holland Park
London W11 4NS
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Direct: +44 (0)20 7313 2262
www.biggroup.co.uk
-Original
Drop down lists I'm not so sure but check boxes and radio buttons
definitely.
They use JavaScript and CSS and it is a form of image replacement that is
used.
Here is one example:
http://www.whatstyle.net/articles/18/pretty_form_controls_with_css
But there are many out there and as long as your
Hello,
As I recall those are controlled by the operating system so if you using
MAC they will look nice shiny blue etc, hope that helped
yes they are normally by either OS or the browser, as are all form
elements, but most can be styled, using either CSS, a proprietary system
or by using
Hi,
Give this a go:
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=enq=css+for+forms+and+drop+down+menusmet
a=
Regards,
Mark Hedley
Voxia Web Development Solutions
Mobile: +44 07894 009 932
Office: +44 01670 840 752
Web:http://www.voxia.co.uk
Proud Members of: GAWDS (Guild of Accessible
Drop down lists I'm not so sure but check boxes and radio buttons
definitely.
They use JavaScript and CSS and it is a form of image replacement that is
used.
Here is one example:
http://www.whatstyle.net/articles/18/pretty_form_controls_with_css
But there are many out there and as long
On 9/14/07, Maarten stolte [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for pointers towards tutorials on how to make a form look
prettier; especially the selectbox/pulldown and checkboxes are of
interest.
I think this article would be very useful to you:
Hi,
Give this a go:
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=enq=css+for+forms+and+drop+down+menusmet
a=
thanks,
but I'd like to style a form element select box, so would you suggest
adding a javascript event to these pulldowns instead of a link to trigger
a hidden value in the form, or..?
Hi,
Try some of the following links for help with styling forms with CSS and
graphics.
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2006/11/11/css-based-forms-modern-solutions/
http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2007/05/15/formal-weirdness/
http://www.sitepoint.com/article/fancy-form-design-css
I think there's more or less consensus that a calendar is tabular
data. For one month that seems fine: th for days of the week, td for
dates of the month (+ events on those days).
So what about an entire year? Is a table of tables permissible? Or
should one somehow cram all the information
Hi Andrew,
few months ago I've made a tutorial[1] on my site (in italian language) to
make an experimental calendar totally accessible using (not a table but) a
pointed list (ul/li)[2] (Try to disable CSS and try to navigate it. Hope
you'll enjoy it). Much people said me to be agree with my
David Laakso wrote:
IE6 frequently crashes on this end; however, I see no problem with your
page /crashing/ with either a very slow or fast drag from a full window
down to 175px by 460px.
ok tHNx
ben
--
netcreators :: creation and innovation
www.netcreators.com - www.typo3.nl
Interesse in
21 matches
Mail list logo