David Dixon wrote:
Chomping at the bit to dismiss IE7 a little early aren't we Georg? :)
:-)
Look at IE7 from a designer/developer's point of view...
IE7 is "dead" - meaning: "stable", so if it acts up and there isn't a
suitable solution that all browsers can see, there's no harm whatsoever
in hacking its dead body to pieces. IE7 can't come back to haunt us, no
matter how many users it has.
No other browser/version will ever see what we feed IE7 only - with the
right targeting method, apart from maybe IE8 (and probably its
successors if it gets any) when it mimics IE7 in "(backwards)
compatibility view".
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
Besides: one should only target/hack dead browsers, like IE7 and
older. Targeting/hacking live browsers like Opera, Firefox, Safari
etc. for real, will only create maintenance-problems as new
versions arrive.
regards
Georg
--
http://www.gunlaug.no
*******************************************************************
List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://webstandardsgroup.org/join/unsubscribe.cfm
Help: [email protected]
*******************************************************************