On Jan 13, 2012, at 10:43 , Philip TAYLOR wrote: > Won't the correct DTD (e.g., HTML 4.01 Strict) accomplish that ?
Arrgh! My bad. I'm talking about an HTML5 page. Something like this seems to help, but I've seen a lot of comments telling that, that isn't applied on all users. <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" > > > mem wrote: >> This a little of topic, but still css related. :) >> >> I'm desperate. :) >> >> Indeed. >> >> Any known way to force the browser to not use compatibility mode at all ? >> (without going to each bad browser users and yelling at them that, despite >> not being there fault on such a stupid decision, they still shouldn't use >> it) ? >> >> :) >> >> >> k. regards, >> mem >> ______________________________________________________________________ >> css-discuss [css-d@lists.css-discuss.org] >> http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d >> List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ >> List policies -- http://css-discuss.org/policies.html >> Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/ ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [css-d@lists.css-discuss.org] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ List policies -- http://css-discuss.org/policies.html Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/