Hi everyone,
I'm new to this group and this is my first message.
I am porting over a rich text editor that currently only works in IE.
I have done tons of search about getting the selected text in a page.
I'm very close...for instance...you can now see the formatting buttons
and also I have the
that.
Buddy Quaid http://www.tangerinefiles.com
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Stuart Sherwood
Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2005 8:18 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Proper IE Hacks
Hi All,
The tips and advice
I don't believe you can stop the inheritance. You should try using the
keywords which are relative to the users font-size setting. Xx-small
x-small small etc... Otherwise you might can try mixing and matching
percentages with ems? I have not tried it but maybe something like:
div style=font-size:
According to 'Designing with web standards' by Jeffrey Zeldman keywords
are used to size up and down the users specified size. It doesn't matter
what size or how they choose their size -- in CSS, 'medium', will always
be what they users specified size is set to and then scaled up or down
by using
One thing to consider is your audience. If your site is all about
graphics, chances are that the people going to your site are NOT blind
and also that no designer in the world that does graphic design is going
to have a 800x600 monitor resolution so in this case, it would be
perfectly fine and you
I can't seem to duplicate your problem in either FF or IE
Works fine for me.
Buddy
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Craig Stump
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2005 8:10 PM
To: WSG Group
Subject: [WSG] Suckerfish nav moving page
I think there's something fundamentally wrong when a discussion about
what font you should and shouldn't use is brought up in the context of
web standards.
Web Standards is nice but to me it seems like its becoming this
'Eliteist' approach, and if you don't follow the guidelines exactly
like I should. But like a tree, some of
these discussions go out on a long limb and lose focus of the big
picture.
Buddy Q.
Joshua Street wrote:
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Buddy Quaid
Sent: Tue 4/10/2005 13:32
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG
I had never been there until this thread popped and up and yes, you are
correct, it's ugly. But I guess it's the content that makes it succeed?
Buddy
Nick Lo wrote:
I agree with Andreas to the degree that he is really saying this is
not THE Top Ten Web Design Mistakes of 2005 but rather Top
I had these same requirements...after trying to do it in CSS alone I
decided it wasnt possible since you can't use height:100% for a
container and it work like a table does. I ended up using a hybrid
layout with a table for the general stuff but all controlled by css. It
works.
Buddy
Tom
I did an experiment with the full height thing about a year ago. I was
absolutely baffled but what I found out, is if you leave out the
doctype, full height will work in IE. But does not work with a doctype.
Obviously because the browser has kicked into the dtd's mode.
You can see the final
Your website will not pull up for me.
Buddy
Drake, Ted C. wrote:
I didnt
have room for all of them
but Ive added most of the sites below.
Ted
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of bit
Sent: Thursday,
October 06, 2005
1:15
post.
Ted
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of Buddy Quaid
Sent: Thursday,
October 06, 2005
1:52 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG]
Stop the
Presses! Announcing the supercool search plugi n!
Your website will not pull up
Well, I think the answer is a yes and no.
Google I don't think reads or puts any weight on the meta tags at all.
It does read a couple of meta tags like the 'revisit' meta tag and a
couple of others but not description or keywords. Google goes more by
link popularity and keyword density in
I second that.
Buddy
John Allsopp wrote:
Martin,
However, I have just received a document from a client who has been
advised by a search engine optimisation specialist [hitwise] to add
specific Meta Keywords to pages in their site.
Get them to ask Hitwise to justify the recommendation,
Peter Firminger wrote:
This thread is a clear case of why non-standards developers laugh at us (Web
Standards Zealots) and justifiably say we're irrelevant.
We're arguing over a line break! Forget the context (but a postal or street
address is a fine example of the need for a line break in the
Usually when telling someone an address your giving it to them as
information which they either have to write down or type in. The pause
is usually to let them write it down before you go any further.
I wonder if there is a way to make the screen reader say what you want
it to say for
As an avid user of Dreamweaver everyday, I can tell you that Dreamweaver
is great for compliant sites. It has a lot of built in tools like a
validator that validates to the spec of your current DTD. Also closes
tags according to the dtd chosen. It has not only xhtml validator but
also 508
im suprised because I think the built in validator actually checks the
validity through the internet from w3c, doesn't it? So, I dont know how
it could not work properly. I may be wrong but that's what I thought
happened. Wha semantically doesn't it do in strict mode? Can you provide
an
what do you mean by conditional comments? It seems to me, that css
hacks are not really a good thing since they are called hacks. The
language should just work regardless of browser or computer. I think
thats what standards are for aren't they? So that the language is
standard for everyone??
away... it's a nice option to have, just stop making IE
so inconsistent with other browsers.
I'll probably be using conditional comments for the next five years,
and everytime I use them I think to myself, this would just be easier
if IE worked the same as FF/Opera/Safari.
On 10/13/05, Buddy
That is very strange...when i 'edit css' via the web developers toolbar
in ff the space goes away even after you close the 'edit css' window
until you refresh...I have no idea.
Buddy
Joseph R. B. Taylor wrote:
Guys and gals,
check this out. http://hayteam.sitesbyjoe.com/default.asp
I
I noted that the contentRight div has a height of 500px on it. The first
paragraph fits within that 500 and so its staying in...after the text
exceeds to bottom of the right div, it spills out...so you need to work
on that rightDiv I think.
Buddy
Paul Bennett wrote:
There's a message here:
wrote:
true! I want the height to stretch the height of the content... how??!!??
I've added the missing /p (thanks, Seona) and the page now validates.
base.css? just a hang-over from another page. all the style info is in
the head at the moment.
On 16/11/05, Buddy Quaid [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Also make sure you look at css drop down examples at www.alistapart.com
. I think there's stuff about using position:relative or z-index to get
it going right.
Buddy
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bert Doorn
Sent: Tuesday, December
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