Well, apart from what has already been said, I have a personal
experience of being on the receiving end of a Red brand. I bank with
HSBC, who in Australia have Red and Grey as their brand colours. Every
month I get a statement in Red print and every month I think I am in
debt or they are writing to
Hiya,
What we need more information about is how the colour red can affect
> readability. I have done research, and I know about the w3c colour contrast
> algorithm. I've also had a look at the psychology of the different colours
> and that red is associated with anger and intensity.
>
I used t
Hi,
We've been asked to change our colour scheme on our websites to fit into our
corporate colour scheme. We currently use blue, and the colour we've been
asked to change to is now red. Our site will be using a solid background,
with white for the content area (along the lines of news.com.au).
I would say it's the mac that's causing your problems.
I'm running XP Pro with Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-GB;
rv:1.8.1.14) Gecko/20080404 Firefox/2.0.0.14
Good to see Magneto being put to good use. Still rebuilding my server to
take it with it's new approach to the database conne
On May 4, 2008, at 4:00 PM, Adam Martin wrote:
I believe that this is a "mac" issue rather than firefox. I am
guessing you are using mac - great too see you are using magento..
As an avid magento fan good too see more and more sites coming about.
Adam - www.tweakmag.com
Ah, the famous tw
On May 4, 2008, at 4:00 PM, Essential eBiz Solutions Ltd wrote:
Just tabbed through the whole checkout forms in FireFox without any
problems
This is VERY ODD!!! What version of FF /platform do you use?
I am on Mac, FF v2.0.0.14. I wish I can capture the tabbing in
action so that I can
I believe that this is a "mac" issue rather than firefox. I am guessing
you are using mac - great too see you are using magento.. As an avid
magento fan good too see more and more sites coming about.
Adam - www.tweakmag.com
tee wrote:
On May 4, 2008, at 7:52 AM, Diego La Monica wrote:
Hi
Just tabbed through the whole checkout forms in FireFox without any problems
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of tee
Sent: 04 May 2008 23:35
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: R: [WSG] Firefox skips dropdown and multi-select list with
t
On May 4, 2008, at 7:52 AM, Diego La Monica wrote:
Hi tee,
can you provide an (un)working example?
Here you are,
http://74.52.59.43/index.php
You need to add a product, then either use 'get a quote' (simple form)
or go ahead with 'proceed to checkout', then select 'checkout as
guest
On May 4, 2008, at 5:46 PM, Viable Design wrote:
W3Schools is not related to or sanctioned by the W3C.
and enjoys a certain notoriety for sometimes offering less-than-
perfect advice. though when I'm in a hurry I still find it a useful
resource as an aide memoire...
Andrew
http://www.and
W3Schools is not related to or sanctioned by the W3C.
On Sun, May 4, 2008 at 3:02 PM, Stuart Foulstone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> http://www.w3schools.com/CSS/css_syntax.asp
>
> The class Selector
>
> With the class selector you can define different styles for the same type
> of HTML elemen
this works for all images without adding a style to each image.
img {border:none;}
img:hover {border-bottom:1px solid #f00;padding-bottom:1px;}
dwain
On 5/4/08, Dean Matthews <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> On May 4, 2008, at 8:10 AM, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
>
> which is what usually happens
http://www.w3schools.com/CSS/css_syntax.asp
The class Selector
With the class selector you can define different styles for the same type
of HTML element.
Say that you would like to have two types of paragraphs in your document:
one right-aligned paragraph, and one center-aligned paragraph. Here
On May 4, 2008, at 8:10 AM, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
which is what usually happens when you go
against the natural order of things
That is an unnecessarily pedantic comment. I already said I solved my
design anomaly by applying a class to the image anchor. I simply asked
if there was a un
Yes, its really easy to add class names as you need them and there is a
level where it seems both logical and usefuul.
Sadly that is not the reality though. Patrick hit the nail in the head
when he mentioned changing designs and having that once relevant class
name end up attaching styles tha
Hi tee,
can you provide an (un)working example?
Diego La Monica
Web 2.0 - Standards - AccessibilitÃ
mobile: +39 3337235382 - skype: diego.la.monica
web: http://diegolamonica.info - http://jastegg.it
-Messaggio originale-
Da: tee [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Inviato: domenica 4 maggio 2
I suppose it wouldn't matter if you used a class or id, but the id can
be linked to from within the document, so if your page had a table of
contents or something, you could jump from point to point.
Id's have to be unique on the page, so they are perfect for attaching to
the unique sections o
On 4 May 2008, at 12:47, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
CSS classes are for presentation.
There is no such thing as a "CSS class". CSS is for presentation. HTML
has classes. CSS selectors can match against HTML classes.
Content is content.
True
Centering content is presentation.
True
Cl
>> CSS classes are for presentation.
>> Content is content.
>> Centering content is presentation.
>> Class names should not use keywords such as "center".
>> "centre" is not a keyword and can be used.
>> The class "centre" can then be used anywhere centering is desired.
>>
>> It is quite easy to r
Stuart Foulstone wrote:
It is quite easy to remember what this class name does, but if you wish to
use some more obscure name, feel free.
And if, at a later date, you change the CSS for a different layout, you
potentially end up with class names that suggest one thing when they
actually do a
Do you mean you have a 1px bottom border on the anchor?
If so, altering the border attributes of the image will not change this.
You could, perhaps, try altering the relative positioning of the image to
slightly lower (hiding the border).
This seems to be a bit messy - which is what usually hap
Stuart Foulstone wrote:
CSS classes are for presentation.
Content is content.
Centering content is presentation.
Class names should not use keywords such as "center".
"centre" is not a keyword and can be used.
The class "centre" can then be used anywhere centering is desired.
It is quite ea
I'd just noticed that Firefox skips the dropdown and multi-select list
with tabbing.
Anybody knows if there is a workround?
Thanks!
tee
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CSS classes are for presentation.
Content is content.
Centering content is presentation.
Class names should not use keywords such as "center".
"centre" is not a keyword and can be used.
The class "centre" can then be used anywhere centering is desired.
It is quite easy to remember what this class
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