Yes, thank you. I will change the example to include different approaches Rick Faircloth wrote: > > I saw the comments made about your markup on a recent > > problem in an email you sent to the list, > > and when I went to look at the problem code at your site, it looked > exactly > > like the code someone suggested as a solution for you. > > > > In other words, by the time I read your email about your problem > > code and how you might change it, it had already been changed > > on your site, too. > > > > I expected to see two different approaches to the problem, instead > > I saw the same code and was confused. > > > > Does that make any sense? :o) > > > > Rick > > > > *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > *On Behalf Of *Dmitrii Dimandt > *Sent:* Wednesday, February 14, 2007 10:40 AM > *To:* jQuery Discussion. > *Subject:* Re: [jQuery] Some jQuery tips and tricks > > > > > > On 2/13/07, *Rick Faircloth* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: > > > > I know I'm very new to jQuery, but I thought my understanding of > > what was going on had been set back a few light years… :o) > > What exactly do you mean? :) > > What i like about jQuery is that you can "go with the flow" of your > thoughts. If you say "I want this and that behave like this and like > that", then it's just a simple task of writing these thoughts down in > the form of jQuery :) And after that someone will come and tell you > that there is a better way of doing that :) (and there usually is :)) ) > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > jQuery mailing list > discuss@jquery.com > http://jquery.com/discuss/ >
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