Hi Luc,
It's my understanding that if you want the page to validate and pass
some basic 508 stuff, ALT tags must be present for any images that are
included in the page markup.
I have seen before (perhaps ALA?) that if the image is decorative a
simple null would surfice as an ALT tag.
I think
Hi Alan,
Try:
table width=100%
Brian
Alan Milnes wrote:
Can anyone tell me what causes the table under Latest Results not to take
the whole 100% width of the div??
http://www.gameplan.org.uk/
http://www.gameplan.org.uk/styles/gplan.css
Thanks
Alan
I know IE is a *huge* market leader, and I *do* make sure my sites work
in IE...
I agree fully with the design for compliant browsers first, then go
back and fix IE* way of doing things. From my own personal experience I
can tell you it is in fact easier that way. I think it's ill advised
One more thing will be required: Web pages need to be better on
compliant browsers.
So in an effort to coax standards compliance out of MS we should all
make sites look *beter* in non IE browsers?
I've yet to run across a client who loves standards and MS arm twisting
so much that they would
Hi Sean,
Looks like you have to clear those floats.
Try adding a div with clear: both; just below the last column.
Brian
Sean Sullivan-Daley wrote:
I am trying to float 3 columns next to each other.
This appearas to be OK in IE6 but is broken in FireFox.
The columns break out of the container in
Ted Drake wrote:
I'm putting together our new web site css-layout. There are a few web
sites that put our site into their frameset. If they take my lovely
css-formatted page and stick it in their ugly, poorly styled web page
built with nasty frames... Could their stylesheet over-ride my style
Sounds great I can see this being very beneficial, especially if done on
a wide scale.
In the spirit of spreading the knowledge and advocating standards in
Gov't, it would be excellent if once you are done, you could post all of
your slides/notes on the net. If you can go the extra mile and get us