>>The designer's job is to care that every pixel falls perfectly into >>place, and the person handling production should answer to them. >>Regardless of where your designer falls (in those 4 well spelled out >>categories), you should receive quality final production html / css / >>(sometimes js) that they've approved and are happy with before you >>even begin integrating.
Amen, and from your lips to the Department of Answering Programmers' Prayers' ears...because it's so true, any conversation containing the dreaded word "PIXEL" is not one we want to have. Funny how they always act as though you're the first one to have the effrontery to tell them just exactly what they can DO... with their PIXEL... as IF. :> I don't mind if the form code is a bit raw and I certainly don't insist on any scripting being provided, or on a full understanding of XHTML syntax as it may relate to what exactly I'm trying to do here, but for goodness' sake just hack something together, so that the forsaken PIXELs are all where they should be and we can all move on to the next step. That way, if you don't hear from me with some utterly incomprehensible and probably completely insane concern about how your PIXEL just simply cannot reside in the precise place in the universe where you wish it to reside without causing undue havoc, you can assume that yes, your PIXEL is just exactly where you left it yesterday, safe and sound. Kristina, a/k/a "I'm really trying to care about your pixel, but it's just not working" _______________________________________________ New York PHP User Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php