Ken Robinson wrote: >... and everything is now working (at least on FF1.5 & MSIE 6 for >windows). If someone can give me feedback from other browsers, I >would appreciate it. Since I'm still in the testing (& playing) phase >I haven't validated the CSS or HTML code yet. >... > Hi Ken,
Ehm, I think validation is just one of the 1st important things in the testing and playing phase! ;-) For instance, Tiny on testlist.php says: the required attribute *type="text/css"* is omitted in the <style>-declaration. - That omission can cause unexpected effects in (some) browsers. Or, the other way, when you validate everything as the product is ready, then adding this afterwards can cause unexpected effects (and you have to play again).... Browsers about testlist.php (on Win98SE): - Opera 8 is about the same as IE6. - Opera 7.54 also, but hovering over the list causes more distance between the list-tems; hovering back outside the list: the list-items stay in the new position, only refresh brings them back to normal position. - Netscape 6.21 (not the newest) moves the paw-bullets to high. - In fact, all browsers interpret the paw-position on their own way. See these screenshots <http://home.tiscali.nl/developerscorner/css-discuss/images/nj-dogtrainer.gif>. - NB: everything without the <style type="text/css">. You can try to see what happens if you place the paws not as list-style-image, but just as background-image in the list-items (with list-style: none), and position them as wanted with background-position. O, and the thinline.gif is missing 1px in width to connect to the header. Then perhaps to consider: the paws are very good in attracting focus > here you have to click! That made for me the 2 paws in the right side of the header a bit confusing: could I click there also? (no). In the lay-out I think they are there a bit to much: they split the attention ("rapid eye movements" from list-paws to header-paws). Maybe you can put some other image in the right of the header? Smiling dog face or something? Btw, the word "dog" is not in the header-image, nor in the head of the index.php. The words "dog training" (just aside each other) in the index occur only once, and is far away from the beginning (allmost at the bottom, in the last paragraph). And "dog trainer" doesn't even show once in the fist page. So that that will make it difficult for the search engines to rank it on a high place under the dog trainings! People don't search on the phrase "Welcome!" (the most important head the search bots see on this page). - Better could be: "Dog training: good for you, good for the dog!" or something as head. In the first paragraph you can welcome the visitor, to stay polite. Greetings, francky ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/
