Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
Ed Mullen wrote:
Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
WaltS wrote:

I did change the size by changing the two pixel parameters with
"Constrain" checked. Maintains the image's aspect ratio.

Sounds like the user used an image editor. After that I'm not sure
what they did.

In my experience resizing images with Composer, which admittedly is
limited to outgoing emails, width or height or both can be modified as I
please, but if I specify a percentage for one and delete the other,
Composer restores the original value in pixels for the "deleted"
parameter. Thus, I can't specify
     <img src="1indy.jpg" height="25%">
because Composer substitutes
     <img src="1indy.jpg" height="25%" width="660px">

I've tried checking the "Constrain" box, but it won't toggle (clicks
have no effect), so I can't say what difference it would make.


One more reason to learn how to write HTML instead of relying on tools
which screw with the code imperfectly.
...

Nice rant, hope your intended readers will see it.


I use DreamWeaver on my website and though I don't use HTML 5, I do use HTML 4.0.1 Strict. And have I run all pages through W3C and they all check except two Items. And I know about them I intended them. I don't know of a way to make them compliant. One is at a specific section on page of one of my ancestor's fed Rail Road workers during the 30's and 40's and was part of the Dick & Willie Road system which was behind the wreck of the Old 97. So I allow playing of that song.

In a section of another page. I have a very small Flash Movie. If there was a another method to use a slide show, I would do it. But feel if any slide show regardless Flash, Or PowerPoint or what ever it would still not pass W3C.

--
Phillip M. Jones, C.E.T.      "If it's Fixed, Don't Break it"
http://www.phillipmjones.net    mailto:[email protected]
_______________________________________________
support-seamonkey mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey

Reply via email to