You might be able to do this with Javascript, but CSS & HTML know nothing about events such as onload. By default most browsers render the links in the CSS visited state until you clear your browser history.
Unfortunately I don't think Javascript has a concept of "visited" in the way CSS does, so getting the affect you are after would not be easy. I think you could probably get the effect you are after by searching through the History object & then running through all the links in your page and styling them depending on whether they are in the history or not. I honestly think this would be way more work than its worth, both for you as the developer and for the browser on each page load. Cheers Mark ------------------ Mark Stanton Technical Director Gruden Pty Ltd Tel: 9956 6388 Mob: 0410 458 201 Fax: 9956 8433 http://www.gruden.com ***************************************************** The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ *****************************************************
