Sorry everyone, I just discovered what the problem was:
I have multiple style sheets and the browsers were only applying one,
not two as required, due to my misuse of the 'name' attribute of the
stylesheet instruction, as illustrated below.
This was incorrect:
?xml-stylesheet
Am i the only one missing the name attribute in the samples?
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 8:00 PM, Grant Bailey
grant_malcolm_bai...@westnet.com.au wrote:
Sorry everyone, I just discovered what the problem was:
I have multiple style sheets and the browsers were only applying one,
not two as
Yuval,
I don't understand your message - did I miss something?
Grant
-Original Message-
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org]
On Behalf Of Yuval Ararat
Sent: Thursday, 17 December 2009 10:11 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Using CSS to
Sorry for the double post, gmail/firefox are going mad.
in the sample code non of the tags carry the attribute name.
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 11:14 PM, Grant Bailey
grant_malcolm_bai...@westnet.com.au wrote:
Yuval,
I don't understand your message - did I miss something?
Grant
It might be that xml requires lowercase only and that the problem is the
H in the id div_Heading.
On Thu, December 17, 2009 8:41 am, Grant Bailey wrote:
Hello,
I've recently started serving my web pages as xml pages using the MIME
type application/xhtml+xml rather than text/css as
I don't kow the answer to this question but I just wanted to clarify that XML
*does not* require lowercase only.
XML *is* case sensitive so that in XML p/P would not be valid, but p/p
and P/P are.
On 18/12/2009, at 7:07 AM, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
It might be that xml requires lowercase