On Sun January 8 2006 06:42, + Francis VERHAEGHE wrote: > I need some help in use of HTLM writer. All in runing smooth to make a > simple website. I have already builded my personnal website and actually > putting one on line for my club. > I went to the forum and I was so surprise that not any question have > been answered. I answered the last one because I probably know this tip. > But I feel that if I ask my question I will never get an answer.....It' > s a pity. > So I'll ask you my question and then I hope to be succesfull: > I write my page and I don't get on the Net exactly want I have done. Is > it a problem of me, Internet, or a small bug in Open office2.0 > The website is http://www.cyclos-du-semnoz.com/ > On the left side we have a frame in which I have put a colomn off > buttons (pictures green with yellow text) > On open Office at home the space between each button is 0,02 fixed with > the paragraph fonction of Op Off. > On Internet this space is very wider. What is the matter > I first used Star Office and Open Office 1 and now Open Office 2. I > enjoy your job. I encourage all my friends to leave Microsoft products > (usually cracked user of word and Excel) I have put a link in my club's > site to Winlibre (Open Office, Gimp, Nvu ....)
As you are not subscribed you may not have seen that: On Mon January 9 2006 22:42, Michael Adams wrote: > What you see on a browser is NOT what you see in an editor. Huge volumes > have been written about these issues. Different browsers display web > pages in different ways. Some have proprietary HTML tags to do things. > NONE have full CSS sopport. Almost all browsers will optionally not > display images if the user chooses this. Some browsers are text speech > readers. All developers, however, agree you will not get optimum web > pages from a word processor. It is a hobby web tool only... period! > > You can: > - Program your pages to the latest standards (and 90%+ of browsers will > break back to quirks mode, but your code is good) > - Program for the lowest common denominator (and rely on the content of > your web page to sell it) > - Use PDF's (which are almost always viewed exactly the same, > slow but effective) > - Use CSS with tricks (to standardise the look on as many browsers as > possible) > - Program for IE6 and to hell with the rest (and hope that is enough to > please 80% of the people 80% of the time) > > - Learn a lot more and choose a happy medium somewhere between all of > the above. > > Having said that as long as you are not getting too serious i would > say Nvu that you mentioned is more what you want. Nvu is better, but not > by an order of magnitude. If it is getting more serious and you hope to > get more work of this type then learn how to program using CSS at least. Please reply to [email protected] only. -- CPH : openoffice.org contributor Maybe your question has been answered already? http://user-faq.openoffice.org/#FAQ --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
