Yes most likely, but in my own apps I just write the div manually and
only use $html for forms/links and images.

On Dec 11, 1:53 pm, maytawn <mayt...@gmail.com> wrote:
> gearvOsh -
>
> Yeah, your're right.  I don't know what I was thinking... but is does
> bring up a related question.  If I was using the CakePHP form
> validation then I would need my input tags wrapped in the correct div
> tags... correct?  Since I'm setting div=false how whold I modify your
> suggestion to make sure my input tags are wrapped in the correct div
> tags?  would I have to do that by hand too, using $html->div()?
>
> On Dec 11, 4:02 am, "Jon Bennett" <jmbenn...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi maytawn,
>
> > >  Thanks for the suggestion.  I tried it... but it did not seem to work.
>
> > >  I added the CSS to my main css file.  And this is what I have in the
> > >  view:
>
> > what was the outputted html like? What did Firebug say tell you about
> > the elements? What I suggested with definitely work in theory, but the
> > CSS was untested, merely there to show how you can apply more than one
> > class to an element.
>
> > cheers,
>
> > jon
>
> > --
>
> > jon bennett
> > w:http://www.jben.net/
> > iChat (AIM): jbendotnet Skype: jon-bennett
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