Roger Keays wrote:
Hi All,
I've just finished a blog on centering multiline content (horizontally
and vertically):
http://www.sunburnt.com.au/publications/design/center-multiple-lines-with-css
The method used is display: table/table-cell for standards browsers, and
a javascript
Micky Hulse wrote:
I would prefer to use a filter for the latest version of Opera that will
be a good long-term fix. Basically, Opera gives a few extra pixels of
top-padding, on a form input, that I would like to compensate for... I
can live with how it is now, but thought I would ask ya'll
Hi guys. Normally I use the following CSS code for clearfix.
For exemple the following code does not clear properly on IE7:
div class=clearfix
div style=width:50px; height:50px: background-image:url(image.png)
no-repeat 0 0; float:left
/div
p
blablabla blablablabla blablabla
On Oct 6, 2007, at 10:15 PM, David Laakso wrote:
@media screen and (min-width: 0px){
#foo { padding: ... ;}
}
And mind the last brace.
Unreliable. That will also target Safari 3 and newer, Konqueror 4
(afaik).
Philippe
---
Philippe Wittenbergh
http://emps.l-c-n.com
On Oct 6, 2007, at 10:27 PM, Phillip Cavaco wrote:
Normally I use the following CSS code for clearfix.
For exemple the following code does not clear properly on IE7:
[...]
.clearfix:after{
content:.;
display:block;
height:0;
clear:both;
visibility:hidden;
}
*
Rare is the day Opera gets it wrong.
@media screen and (min-width: 0px){
#foo { padding: ... ;}
}
This is hardly a long term fix.
Safari 3 (due for release along with the next version of OS X within
the next couple of weeks) will support media queries. To exclude it
(and other browsers using
You could check at this page
http://www.webdevout.net/css-hacks#in_css-selectors
Micky Hulse wrote:
I would prefer to use a filter for the latest version of Opera that will
be a good long-term fix. Basically, Opera gives a few extra pixels of
top-padding, on a form input, that I would
I see, so the element using overflow (#cast) is caught up in the float as well,
and part of its height is hidden by the floated element (in this case the
#marquee div). Does that sound right?
Since the #cast element is the only one that uses overflow:auto, I simply
cleared it with clear:both.
Roger Keays wrote:
http://www.sunburnt.com.au/publications/design/center-multiple-lines-with-css
http://www.gunlaug.no/contents/wd_additions_20.html
If only I had found that yesterday!
Options are always nice to have.
Since your source-code construction is far from valid, and the CSS quite
On Oct 6, 2007, at 11:33 PM, Chris Davis wrote:
I see, so the element using overflow (#cast) is caught up in the
float as well, and part of its height is hidden by the floated
element (in this case the #marquee div). Does that sound right?
No, the width of that element collapses to near
At 9:33 AM -0500 10/6/07, Chris Davis wrote:
I see, so the element using overflow (#cast) is caught up in the
float as well, and part of its height is hidden by the floated
element (in this case the #marquee div). Does that sound right?
Since the #cast element is the only one that uses
On Fri, 5 Oct 2007 17:32:00 +0100, Donna Watch wrote:
[...]
I am trying to achieve:
the html has the text for, say, H1 and then using css, to obtain the result of
image left, H1 as defined in html text, image right followed by an image
underneath
all in the same class? i.e the style and
On Oct 6, 2007, at 10:27 PM, Phillip Cavaco wrote:
Normally I use the following CSS code for clearfix. For exemple the
following code
does not clear properly on IE7:
[...]
.clearfix:after{
content:.;
display:block;
height:0;
clear:both;
visibility:hidden;
}
* html .clearfix{
I remember reading somewhere about CSS you can add, so that links
won't get the dotted border around them when you click on the links ,
but I cannot remember what it is. Can anyone refresh my memory? This
may be just a Firefox thing.
--
::Bruce::
I guess you're talking about outline.
Bruce Gilbert wrote:
I remember reading somewhere about CSS you can add, so that links
won't get the dotted border around them when you click on the links ,
but I cannot remember what it is. Can anyone refresh my memory? This
may be just a Firefox
On 06/10/2007, Tim Offenstein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am reviewing a page for a client (www.physics.uiuc.edu) that uses a
hover class and some events. On lines 178, 194, and 202 in the HTML a
call for onmouseover, onfocus, onmouseout, and onblur events occurs.
You're trying to apply onblur
Gunlaug Sørtun on 03/10/07 01:45, wrote:
Adam Hardy wrote:
I'm looking for a simple solution to a width problem on a page showing
rows of items with various other bits of info for each row.
http://www.gargantus.com/sylvie/list.html
In the first block on this page, I use a div per row
Adam Hardy wrote:
Gunlaug Sørtun on 03/10/07 01:45, wrote:
Are you thinking along these lines...?
http://www.gunlaug.no/tos/alien/ah/test_07_1003.html
Yes I am thinking along those lines - and your solution is
tantalisingly close, if only it behaved itself in IE6, which
annoyingly drops
At 11:00 AM -0700 on 10/6/07, David Hucklesby wrote about Re: [css-d]
clearfix tweak needed on IE7:
Of course, you could simply use:
.clearfix {zoom: 1;}
since only IE 5/6/7 Win recognize zoom.
Won't fix IE 5.01 Win though. You will still need the height: 1%;
if you care about that
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