Robert Ginn wrote:

>  >From: david <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
>  >Perhaps you could:
> 
>  >1. Leave the <hr> tags alone, unstyled except for one thing in CSS: hide
>  >them. When CSS is enabled, the HR isn't shown.
> 
>  >2. Get the desired "horizontal rule" effects you want using the border
>  >of either the block element above or below it. Much more power, that
>  >way, and much better across browsers.
> 
> Thanks very much, gentlemen.  I've cleaned up the page, but haven't tried any 
> cross-browser styles 
> for hr elements.  I need to progress further in CSS before I understand that 
> coding well enough to 
> use it.  Instead, I first used top and bottom borders to provide visual 
> separation.  These worked 
> fine until I reduced the size of the viewing window.  When using <hr>, the 
> horizontal rule 
> separated the narrowed text perfectly.  When using borders on existing <div> 
> elements as 
> separators, the effect was awful when the viewing window was reduced.

What do you mean by "awful"? Tells me nothing about what happened.

> http://www.sitkamusicfestival.org/6-strictindex.html
> http://www.sitkamusicfestival.org/6-strictssmf.css

-- 
David
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
authenticity, honesty, community
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