Actually, by using a conditional stylesheet (with the @if annotation)
the result would be much cleaner. The browser will only receive a
tailor made css, and your javascript will only be used for stuff it's
intended for, not styling.

On 16 jun, 03:21, Sky <myonceinalifet...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I personally prefer to keep logic in the application's language. I
> like to keep CSS for just styling and keep all my logic in JS. Is
> there a particular reason you can't just use JS to detect which
> browser is running and then grab the right ImageResource for the job
> (in this case you then need one ImageResource for each browser)? Of
> course, you don't have to comply with my own standards and as such you
> would need to use conditional css as was kindly mentioned by fmod.
>
> :)
>
> On Jun 15, 7:38 pm, fmod <francisco.mode...@gdsoft.eu> wrote:
>
> > I did not try myself, but I think you need conditional 
> > css.http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/latest/DevGuideClientBundle.htm...
>
> > On Jun 15, 11:27 am, Stefan Bachert <stefanbach...@yahoo.de> wrote:
>
> > > Hi,
>
> > > I would like to use ClientBundle and ImageResource.
> > > But I would like to supply different images (under the same name) by
> > > browser.
>
> > > Does anyone have an idea how this could be achieved easily?
>
> > > Stefan Bacherthttp://gwtworld.de
>
>

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