The span tag should work in this case as long as the
attributes in the CSS class bodyText over-write the
ones for the anchor tag.   For example, if the anchor
tag is set font-color: blue; and the bodyText class is
set font-color: red; this link would be red, not blue.

As for SES, it refers to Search Engine Safe urls.
Most search engines are correcting it now, but used to,
search engines could not process dynamic urls - which
means they ignored the fuseaction attribute and
therefore fusebox fell apart in terms of getting
registered with the search engines.   Many search
engines however are now starting to handle dynamic
urls, so ?fuseaction= is now becoming valid in the
search engines.   I have also heard bad things in terms
of rankings if it you have a long list of directories
in your path, which is what SES urls tend to look like.

There is always research to be done in terms of search
engines and an SES debate could go on forever, but the
mentioned code below appears to be correct in terms of
SES and CSS.

-- Jeff

-----Original Message-----
From: Dina Hess [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, April 21, 2002 2:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: SES Questions


>   <a href="#self#/fuseaction/#XFA.about#"
class="menu"
title="About Airtight
> Web Services"><span class="bodytext">About</span></a>
>

The span tag won't work there. It's implementing your
a:link.menu
style. Also, I believe the syntax for your href
attribute should
be: href="#self#?fuseaction=#XFA.about#".

BTW, what's SES stand for?

~ dina

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