> Hi again,
>
> Ian intelligently intoned...
>>
>>>
>>> Oh, yeah, and if anyone can tell me what the deuce those creepy 
>>> little
>>> "A"s are about, it'd be very greatly appreciated!
>>>
>>
>> {Clip, Slash)

Cem Meric  quietly queried:

>  Have you considered upgrading the site to "CSS only code" without 
> those creepy
> little "A"s ones in for all?
>
>
Cem, their budget called for only one page addition, nothing more. I'm 
considering asking if they want an entire redo, but they've already 
said they really can't afford it. Trust me my friend, I've thought of 
that a few times! ;-)

Then Nicholas Morgan mentioned...

> What are you trying to accomplish with these edittagsrc things?  Are 
> you defining a region for people to insert content?  If you are using 
> a form in the backend to update the data then you should just spit out 
> the string into a div.  Does your code in the site look for that 
> special tag?  If so you could change the way the script works and make 
> it store the content in a variable and then just print that variable 
> where you want it in the page.  As for more help with CSS that's not 
> really going to help you get your content from point A to point B.  It 
> is for making that content look awesome once it gets to point B.  For 
> CSS first start with getting ready of the font tags. And assigning a 
> font-family and font-size to the body ( and using % or keyword like 
> small)
>
Nicholas, this is all new to me, as I didn't design the original site, 
and am a very new newbie. That edittag stuff is something that's used 
to allow for certain of the company's employees to make additions and 
subtractions to certain site pages, from their various locations. The 
site page that they do the work on is not seen on the site, but the 
page URL is part of the site. Only the certain few have the URL to see 
it. And the page just looks like a small form with a drop-down list and 
a text area for them to fill out. For instance, on the jobs page, they 
would be able to go to this special page, choose "jobs" from their 
drop-down list, and then insert the text into the text window 
describing the job and location.

This system is what I'm trying to figure out how to replace with CSS 
and eliminate what is obviously some very clumsy old coding.

And thanks for the hint on the "A"s...I'll check it out, but those 
things are hanging out in the middle of blank white space...nowhere 
near any of the actual text.

Dave

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