jquery Lover, let go of what? this technique? this thread? or my
repeatedly removing and reposting the same post, because you get an
email alert every time?


On Jan 17, 11:10 am, jQuery Lover <ilovejqu...@gmail.com> wrote:
> OFFTOP:
>
> Johny, just let it go already... :)))
>
> ----
> Read jQuery HowTo Resource  -  http://jquery-howto.blogspot.com
>
> On Sun, Jan 18, 2009 at 12:07 AM, johny why <johny...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > right, Klaus, specificity resolves conflicts.
>
> > if your main site css uses !important on any element which conflicts
> > with your candy css, that would create a conflict in your candy, which
> > MIGHT resolve in favor of the site's css-- causing your candy to
> > display wrong!
>
> > fortunately, !important seems to be used rarely, so such a conflict is
> > unlikely to arise—and even then, there's a 50% chance the candy css
> > will win!
>
> > if, by rare chance, your site's css has a conflicting !important which
> > overpowers the candy css, then you might be able to override it with
> > some javascript and getOverrideStyle. (or, runtimeStyle is an IE-only
> > option)
>
> > w3.org states:
> > "getOverrideStyle method provides a mechanism through which a DOM
> > author could effect immediate change to the style of an element
> > without modifying the explicitly linked style sheets of a document or
> > the inline style of elements in the style sheets. This style sheet
> > comes after the author style sheet in the cascade algorithm and is
> > called override style sheet. The override style sheet takes precedence
> > over author style sheets. An "!important" declaration still takes
> > precedence over a normal declaration. Override, author, and user style
> > sheets all may contain "!important" declarations. User "!important"
> > rules take precedence over both override and author "!important"
> > rules, and override "!important" rules take precedence over author "!
> > important" rules."
> >http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-DOM-Level-2-Style-20001113/css.html#CSS...
>
> > in other words, an "override" style marked "!important" is the CSS of
> > highest-precedence, in the CSS-hierarchy.
>
> > if your candy's css has conflicting declarations WITHIN ITSELF, then,
> > unless it's a bug in the candy, it's a conflict intended, by the candy
> > designer, to be resolved by specificity-- and applying !important to
> > ALL elements within the candy will have no effect on the intended
> > behavior of the candy—other than the joyful benefit of insulating your
> > candy from the site's css!

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