> Ok, I've tried that. I've also used the container to give a background
> colour of white for the content area, where the main body background
> will be grey. This hasn't been entirely successful; I guess I have to
> set a fixed height, as not setting one meant the white background
> wasn't se
>>I've culled a horizontal navigation bar with a drop-down from a couple
of places, and I can't seem to alter the line height in the drop-down,
which is too high in IE.
David,
You can use conditional CSS to adjust the position in IE. Add this CSS
in the head, below your styles and just before you
to
contain elements within a div.
HTH,
Kim Finleyson
Technical Communications/Web Content
Professional Computer Software Services, Inc.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark
Fredrickson
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 11:55 AM
To: CSS
I have a 2-part question regarding the order of divs in an HTML page.
(Please note that the pages I design are only for my company's
customers, which I happen to know will be using IE.)
1. For a tableless CSS layout, I read that for search engines (SEO),
links should be at the top of the HTML. H