Hi,
This is the Web Standards Group.
Web Standards say only use tables for tabular data - not presentation.
I'm not sure what your tabular data is here?
--
Stuart Foulstone.
http://www.bigeasyweb.co.uk
BigEasy Web Design
69 Flockton Court
Rockingham Street
Sheffield
S1 4EB
Tel. 07751 413451
Hi there
On 01/08/07, Stuart Foulstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
This is the Web Standards Group.
Web Standards say only use tables for tabular data - not presentation.
Stuart, I think you're referring to WGAG 1. It does *sort of* say
that, but not quite...
While it's not best
On 01/08/07, David Dorward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 1 Aug 2007, at 09:34, lisa herrod wrote:
On 01/08/07, Stuart Foulstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Web Standards say only use tables for tabular data - not
presentation.
Stuart, I think you're referring to WGAG 1.
Lets look at HTML
Hi all,
I have previously tried to create a horizontal page navigation with a
fixed height but there seems to be two distinct problems with the two
methods that I have used to date.
1) The first method employs top and bottom padding on a elements to
vertically centre the text within the
On 1 Aug 2007, at 09:34, lisa herrod wrote:
On 01/08/07, Stuart Foulstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Web Standards say only use tables for tabular data - not
presentation.
Stuart, I think you're referring to WGAG 1.
Lets look at HTML 4.01 instead, which is somewhat clearer on the
subject:
Hi Christian,
Use option 1 with em units instead of pixels for your top and bottom
padding. The padding will increase as the text resizes.
Al
On 8/1/07, Christian Fagan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I have previously tried to create a horizontal page navigation with a
fixed height but
I agree Al.
Christian its not bad. There are MANY pixel to em calcs online to google it.
:)
--DK
On 8/1/07, al morris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Christian,
Use option 1 with em units instead of pixels for your top and bottom
padding. The padding will increase as the text resizes.
Al
On 8/1/07, Daniel Kendrick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I agree Al.
Christian its not bad. There are MANY pixel to em calcs online to google it.
:)
--DK
I use this religiously (well, ya know...):
http://riddle.pl/emcalc/
--
Tom Livingston | Senior Multimedia Artist | Media Logic |
ph:
If I understand what you are asking, try using line-height instead of
what you are doing now. That will keep the text centered vertically in
the element.
--
E. Michael Brandt
www.divaHTML.com
divaGPS : you-are-here menu highlighting
divaFAQ : FAQ pages with pizazz
www.valleywebdesigns.com
I am currently out of the office until Monday 6 August 2007.
If you have an enquiry please contact:
Martha Herewini on 9391 9048
or Saikat Choudhury on 9391 9769
Regards, Marian Weatherstone
Web Support Officer
NSW Department of Health
Matt wrote:
I guess there were a couple of concerns raised. One of them was the
justification of the table's use. I chose it only because it
is currently the only way I know to put pretty borders (outer and
inner) around and within an image.
/
I'm still waiting on someone to post a
Hassan,
The specific portion of the code I'm having a problem with was
inlcuded on my first post. The code that was not included is just
regular table based border wrapping. I bet most if not all the members
here are of the been there, done that experience level, which is why
I didn't bother
Thankyou for responses...
Thanks Michael, this is what I was after
E Michael Brandt wrote:
If I understand what you are asking, try using line-height instead of
what you are doing now. That will keep the text centered vertically
in the element.
--
Christian Fagan
Fagan Design
Matt wrote:
The specific portion of the code I'm having a problem with was
inlcuded on my first post. The code that was not included is just
regular table based border wrapping. I bet most if not all the members
here are of the been there, done that experience level, which is why
I
My dilemna was and still is to autofit an image of any size (entire image
should be viewable) within the table's background image property using the
style attribute. This table is currently no more than roughly 100 pixels
on either side.
Hi Matt,
Here is a sample mockup I created using
You're very welcome. There are a bewildering array of tricks with CSS.
--
E. Michael Brandt
www.divaHTML.com
divaGPS : you-are-here menu highlighting
divaFAQ : FAQ pages with pizazz
www.valleywebdesigns.com
JustSo PictureWindow
JustSo PhotoAlbum
--
Christian Fagan wrote:
Thankyou for
I think there may have been a discussion regarding the vCard File recently,
and if there was, I didn't study those emails because I didn't have to deal
with it at the time. Today, however, I got a new project of re-creating a
website with the current design. On this client's contact page, there
Hi Joyce,
It looks like vCard is a standard, so I guess the user's email client would
pick it up:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VCard
HTH,
Paul
***
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Oh, you so just put a huge smile on my face :D
Thanks for the technorati link. I was unaware of this, and it makes all
the work I did on microformats on my staff listing page worth it.
(http://www.swinburne.edu.au/ads/about/staff.htm)
Thanks.
Lucien.
--
Lucien Stals
Multimedia/Web Developer
vCard's (.vcf files) will also open in a Mac OS X Address book.
Not everyone will have a VCF compatible address book and hence an attempt
should be made to educate/explain their use.
You should mark up the displayed address information as an hCard:
http://microformats.org/wiki/hcard
... and
A vCard is an industry standard format. It works in Outlook or
Windows Address Book in Windows, Entourage and Address Book in OS X
and if your mobile phone was released in the last 5 or so years,
likely it as well.
vCard files are often attached to outgoing emails in the corporate
world
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