Sounds more like a web design issue rather than a web standards issue.
Maybe it should be taken to a web design list.
Try -
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/adobe-dreamweaver/?v=1&t=directory&ch=web&pub=groups&sec=dir&slk=1
Andrew.
Laert Jansen provided the following information on 11/04
: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] How to make diagonal lines change color?
Hey Mike, there´s a black line and a grey line when the mouse
passes over one grey line it becomes blackwhen the mouse passes
over one black line it becomes grey..only the
Hey Mike, there´s a black line and a grey line when the mouse
passes over one grey line it becomes blackwhen the mouse passes
over one black line it becomes grey..only the line that the
mouse passes over would change its color..not the whole bg or the other
lines...
>-Original Message-
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Stuart Foulstone
>Sent: Friday, April 11, 2008 9:40 AM
>To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
>Subject: Re: [WSG] How to make diagonal lines change colour?
>
>Hi,
>
>From a usability and accessibility point of vie
Hi,
>From a usability and accessibility point of view doing this is a very bad
idea, so is way OT for Web Standards Group.
On Thu, April 10, 2008 11:54 pm, Laert Jansen wrote:
> Hello everyone.
>
> Well there´s something I want to do but I have no idea if it´s possible to
> be done and how would
Completely unrelated but a minor bugbear from me - If you disable images,
then you can't read your links as they are white and the usual browser
background color default is white. This can be remedied by adding a
background color of black to your body so that the links will now become
visible when
Kane,
on Friday, April 11, 2008 at 03:03 wsg@webstandardsgroup.org wrote:
> If I HAD to do something like this, I would create a Gif image that had a
> transparency where you wanted the colour change.
Yes, but you should use a PNG with alpha-transparency. The lines are
diagonal, so you need some
Do I understand this right: you want the background to change, as the mouse
passes over one of these diagonal lines - or just when the user mouses over any
part of the background?
Mike
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lae
Hi ,
If I HAD to do something like this, I would create a Gif image that had a
transparency where you wanted the colour change.
Then use the GIF as a background image on a item and specify a background
colour that changed on hover.
div#name {background: #f00 url(image-name.gif) repeat;}
div#na
warning: untested!
You could try this* (won't people almost _always_ be mousing over the page body
though?)
body{background: #000 url(/path/to/image.gif) repeat;}
body:hover{background: #000 url(/path/to/somotherimage.gif) repeat;}
* won't work in IE 6 though
HTH?
Paul
*
Well, you could simply change the background image to create the
illusion of it changing colour. However, I think technically it is
way too confusing for it to change colour when you browse the site.
A different note, your page claims to be in Portuguese, when the only
Portuguese text appearing o
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