yes I know that But you are not getting it, which is fine, you don't have too, I do. We know some or a lot of people it wont fit which is a given. But your option is to make them page scroll and mine is to window scroll so that they DON'T have to scroll all the way up to use the menu. Does that
Hi,
If you tell your client to visit www.msn.com with his Mac IE5.2 browser
then he'll get the message that his browser is out of date and that he
should change it to another browser like FireFox or Safari.
So even Microsoft tells Macusers to change to another browser than Internet Explorer. I
So you hit CTRL and HOME for the top or CTRL and END for the bottom of a page. And yes, lots of people do know that. Simple, Josh.
Yahoo! Model Search
- Could you be the next
catwalk superstar? Check out the competition now
Title: Dragon Way (Site Check)
http://test.dragon-way.com/
Any other comments
would be ace.
Firstly, congratulations on putting
together a site that is well structured with the headings etc. My comments
relate more to the usability and accessibility aspects.
Your splash screen
The latest NZ Macguide magazine has a good interview on Macs and accessibility
at Royal NZ Foundation for the Blind, and also some info on their new website
(which uses Plone CMS) at http://www.rnzfb.org.nz/
Both well worth a look.
Cheers
Rebecca
I have added a hidden menu to a site for those using text browsers or
surfing with images turned off.
The regular menu is image based but uses titles for accessibility, but
this doesn't show in Lynx. I'd rather have a text based menu now but the
client is happy and it is better than the drop
Stuart Sherwood wrote:
I have added a hidden menu to a site for those using text browsers or
surfing with images turned off.
The regular menu is image based but uses titles for accessibility, but
this doesn't show in Lynx.
You *ARE* giving those images suitable ALT attributes, I hope? TITLE
Hi-I am new to CSS and strict. The URL I am having trouble with is http://members.cox.net/loricole.newhome.html.
The style sheet is at http://members.cox.net.loricole/newtext.css.
As you use the navigations tabs and go back to the home page, the blue
background breaks up the white index
Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
TITLE is irrelevant for accessibility.
Actually, let me rephrase that before it causes confusion: TITLE on
images is pretty much irrelevant (unless you're doing some sort of
mystery meat navigation and need to ensure that Firefox gives the user
a tooltip description
Sorry, I forgot to mention that the menu uses CSS Sprit rollovers so there are
no images
in the markup, therefore no alt tags.
Title tags are irrelevant for accessibility? From W3C: Audio user agents may speak the
title information in a similar context. For example, setting the attribute on a
Lori Cole wrote:
Hi-I am new to CSS and strict. The URL I am having trouble with is
http://members.cox.net/loricole.newhome.html. The style sheet is at
http://members.cox.net.loricole/newtext.css.
Please make sure you type the URIs correctly in the future and use '.'
and '/' appropriately.
Stuart Sherwood wrote:
Sorry, I forgot to mention that the menu uses CSS Sprit rollovers so
there are no images
in the markup, therefore no alt tags.
They're *attributes*, not tags, please learn the correct terminology.
Title tags are irrelevant for accessibility?
No, they're not
Hi Lori
Your issue with the tabs can be quickly fixed by switching the order in your
css of the #menu a:visited and #menu a:hover, so the hover is 'above' the
visited declaration.
The page break up looks like a guillotine bug. Need to dig more to find the
cause for that!
Regards
Scott Swabey
Thankyou for correcting my terminology.
Text-indent. That's just what I need! Thankyou Lachlan, its a much
better solution.
Stuart
Lachlan Hunt wrote:
Stuart Sherwood wrote:
Sorry, I forgot to mention that the menu uses CSS Sprit rollovers so
there are no images
in the markup, therefore
Thanks Scott,
The correct order of those elements is doing the trick. Yellow appears.
I did change the CSS comments to be the CSS format but that has altered some
other page's format like the form entry windows and text alignment in the
client page. The blue line still appears on the home
Stuart Sherwood wrote:
I have added a hidden menu to a site for those using text browsers or
surfing with images turned off.
Avoid creating links without text, it's bad practice. Using small images
of text in you main navigation is bad too.
Things that make me go 'huh?'
1. If I turn off
What don't you want to use the W3C one?
On Nov 23, 2005, at 5:42 PM, Geoff Pack wrote:
Does anyone know of a downloadable CSS validator (other than the
W3C one) that I can install on an local server to batch check files
on my local network? We currently use the WDG html validator, but
Jay Gilmore
Developer/Consultant
Affordable Websites and Marketing Solutions for Real
Small Business.
SmashingRed Web Marketing
P) 902.529.0651
E) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Lori Cole wrote:
Thanks Scott,
The correct order of those elements is doing the trick. Yellow appears.
I did
Geoff Pack wrote:
...install on an local server to batch check files
on my local network?
From: Steve Ferguson
What don't you want to use the W3C one?
...files on my local network, if you're working on an intranet
you can't use the w3c validators, unless you cut and paste, or
upload
Lachlan Hunt said:
!--tab is an invalid HTML comment
how so?
Please make sure you type the URIs correctly in the future and use '.'
and '/' appropriately.
minor typos are easy to ignore, and really don't warrant being commented on
kind regards
Terrence WOod.
On Nov 27, 2005, at 7:44 PM, Peter Williams wrote:
Geoff Pack wrote:
...install on an local server to batch check files
on my local network?
From: Steve Ferguson
What don't you want to use the W3C one?
...files on my local network, if you're working on an intranet
you can't use the
Lori,
I am going to suggest that you download Firefox or Mozilla to develop
with. You will find that IE is too forgiving and allows errors to fall
through the cracks by trying to render the page vs. not parsing invalid
code.It is better to learn to make it right and then tweak it for IE.
I
Stuart,
Try this http://tjkdesign.com/articles/tip.aspRegards, Irina.
Terrence Wood wrote:
Lachlan Hunt said:
!--tab is an invalid HTML comment
how so?
In SGML, the comment syntax is as follows:
! (Markup declaration open (MDO))
-- first comment --(Zero or more comments.)
-- second comment --
(Markup
On Nov 23, 2005, at 5:42 PM, Geoff Pack wrote:
Does anyone know of a downloadable CSS validator (other than the W3C
one) that I can install on an local server to batch check files on my
local network? We currently use the WDG html validator, but their CSS
validator is not available for
Lord Vader's Former Handle, Anakin
link, visited, focus, hover, active
Always in that order!
--
--
Christian Montoya
christianmontoya.com ... rdpdesign.com ... cssliquid.com
**
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
See
From: Terrence Wood
Lachlan Hunt said:
!--tab is an invalid HTML comment
how so?
Perhaps not by strict definition, but the following reference
explains where Lachlan is probably coming from.
http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/wilbur/misc/comment.html
I like to stick with the !--
Jay Gilmore wrote:
2. When styling your the a pseudo classes, hover, active, visited.
The way to ensure that the cascade works is through the LoVe
HAte a:link, a:visited, a:hover (a:focus), a:active. I read
somewhere that there was is a Star Wars reference that takes the
Lachlan Hunt said:
In SGML, the comment syntax is as follows:
I believe your original comment was that it was invalid HTML. While
similar, the SGML rule differs from HTML in it's treatment of whitespace,
and the example you provided is, in fact, invalid HTML. The
recommendation[1] goes on to say
Christian Montoya wrote:
Lord Vader's Former Handle, Anakin
link, visited, focus, hover, active
Always in that order!
Yeah -- that's it!
-Jay
Jay Gilmore
Developer/Consultant
Affordable Websites and Marketing Solutions for Real
Small Business.
SmashingRed Web Marketing
P)
I think I have come up with a more elegant solution now.
There is only one menu with each link formatted like this:
lia id=Home title=Home href=index.jspbr /Home/a/li
The br pushes the text under the header so it isn't visable to regular
users but accessable when images are turned off.
Terrence Wood wrote:
Lachlan Hunt said:
In SGML, the comment syntax is as follows:
I believe your original comment was that it was invalid HTML. While
similar, the SGML rule differs from HTML in it's treatment of whitespace,
There is no formal difference between HTML4 and SGML comments, as
Stuart Sherwood wrote:
I think I have come up with a more elegant solution now.
There is only one menu with each link formatted like this:
lia id=Home title=Home href=index.jspbr /Home/a/li
The br pushes the text under the header so it isn't visable to regular
users but accessable when images
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