>> On 10/19/05, Mike Brown wrote:
>> This really is a rhetorical question born of frustration...
>> It would certainly help in producing accessible forms if we didn't
>> have to say, "we can use legend and be properly accessible, or we can
>> use heading and be able to place it where we want, but
Hello,
I am out of the office until Nov 1. I will have limited access to email so for
any urgent queries please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] on (04) 474 8884.
Thanks,
Andy
>>> wsg 10/20/05 08:43 >>>
It depends how you want to style it mostly times you can whip moz and
IE into shape (with marg
It depends how you want to style it mostly times you can whip moz and
IE into shape (with margin, position, and padding) but I've always found
Opera to be problematic.
Usually I've had to revisit the visual design. Make a case that a form is
a special information object (e.g. interactive) wher
A little bit on the legend tag and Internet Explorer at the IEBlog
http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2005/10/12/480242.aspx
Hope this can be somewhat helpfull to you. Actually it might make you
even more frustrated, but it's definitely related and worth the read.
Vincent
On 10/19/05, Mike Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This really is a rhetorical question born of frustration...
> It would certainly help in producing accessible forms if we didn't have
> to say, "we can use legend and be properly accessible, or we can use
> heading and be able to place it where w
This really is a rhetorical question born of frustration, but why is the
styling of legends and fieldsets so bad across browsers?
Why can't you, visually, place the legend wherever you want? Even just
being able to place it above the fieldset without overlaps and having
the legend sit halfway