I've read about 11 books on CSS, but the first book of Ingo Chao really 
strucked me.
This book speaks from the real world point of view, not from an abstract 
idea of CSS as an ideal tool for separating content from presentation.
In this book, Ingo shows various techniques that are hard to find even 
on the web.
Do you know how to create a floated image that will be entirely wrapped 
by the text of two
adjacent columns?
Do you know how to create an advanced layout that works even on IE6?
Do you know how to make 'display: inline-block" work also in IE6?
Do you know how to debug your CSS also in standard compliant browsers 
(yes, even such browsers may have bugs)?
The only difficulty of this book is that is all in German, but the 
examples in the DVD
are understandable even for an English speaker.
If you're not afraid of German and want to improve your CSS knowledge to 
the limits, visit
http://www.galileocomputing.de/katalog/buecher/titel/gp/titelID-1668?GalileoSession=26288972A3w0sT-sU-Q

^.^

-- 
http://www.css-zibaldone.com
http://www.css-zibaldone.com/test/ (English)
http://www.css-zibaldone.com/articles/ (English)
http://mimicry.css-zibaldone.com (Blog)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ (Flickr)

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