>>When you have the PC back, check the setting in both IE/6 and IE/7
to make sure they are set to text-size "medium."<<
IE6 - yes, set to Medium, and looks fine.
IE7 - yep - it's the same. It doesn't look *quite* as bold in IE7 as
it does on my Mac, but it's definitely bolder than my comp w
Thansk all - okay, here we go..
>>Validate the markup on all pages. Do you and/or the client have IE/
6 and IE/7 set at anything other than Text Size : medium (default)?<<
I validated - right now, the only thing that makes it *invalid* is the
flash. But when I take out the flash, the page is
I'm doing a site that uses a black background with white text. You
can see it here (still under development - so I know things are messed
up all over the place! And a warning - it's for a stage musician, so
there is audio and video that plays as soon as the page loads up. I'm
still tryin
I don't know *exactly* what it means, but I know that you have to have
a really good text editor to see it, because usually it won't show up.
It appears *before* even the doctype in the head of your document.
It'll be the very first thing you see. I can't tell you what kind of
text editor
Hey all,
I'm working on a site that's overdue, and I cannot figure out why in
the world this isn't working for me. (For the record, we've had lots
of heat this week, and my air conditioner busted on the first day of
this heat wave - so I've been stupid all week long! That's my excuse,
and
For the record, I get around this bug by placing my comments *inside*
a containing div, not just after. Then I never have this problem
happen :) I used to, all the time, when I would close a div and then
put a comment after it. Then someone clued me into that little
tidbit, and now it's