James Ducker wrote:
Hi there,
As a test, try using that style on an element that isn't floated or
inside a floated element.
That was worth a try - I added a break-after to the preceding
paragraph, but Safari 4 seems intent on ignoring my wishes.
(I double-checked in other browsers - either
2009/10/14 David Hucklesby huckle...@gmail.com:
James Ducker wrote:
Hi there,
As a test, try using that style on an element that isn't floated or inside
a floated element.
That was worth a try - I added a break-after to the preceding
paragraph, but Safari 4 seems intent on ignoring my
Nick Fitzsimons wrote:
2009/10/14 David Hucklesby huckle...@gmail.com:
James Ducker wrote:
Hi there,
As a test, try using that style on an element that isn't floated or inside
a floated element.
That was worth a try - I added a break-after to the preceding
paragraph, but Safari 4 seems
hello
i dont really get what you mean can you pleas tell me more
On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 10:05 PM, David Hucklesby huckle...@gmail.comwrote:
Trying to put the entire printed recipe on its own printed page, most
browsers honor my page-break-before: always; declaration. I can't get this
to
Hi there,
As a test, try using that style on an element that isn't floated or
inside a floated element.
- James
***
List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
Unsubscribe:
David Hucklesby wrote:
Trying to put the entire printed recipe on its own printed page, most
browsers honor my page-break-before: always; declaration. I can't
get this to work nohow no way in Webkit (Safari and Chrome), even by
adding !important...
http://yewebwiz.info/temp/kam/
The rule is
Trying to put the entire printed recipe on its own printed page, most
browsers honor my page-break-before: always; declaration. I can't get
this to work nohow no way in Webkit (Safari and Chrome), even by adding
!important...
http://yewebwiz.info/temp/kam/
The rule is first in the @print