Bob Rosenberg wrote:
> Yes. Embed the correct version of the rule on the page. ID has to be
> unique on the page so IE6 is correct in stopping on the mismatch since
> when it finds the ID'ed tag with the wrong class on it since there can
> not be another tag with that ID to match. While it is th
At 12:59 -0400 on 09/26/2007, Seth Green wrote about [css-d] IE6
Non-Existant Class Bug:
>As you will see if you load the page below... In IE6 the div remains
>red, even though it is explicitly set to green in the last rule.
>
>It seems that the middle rule, which targets a non-exist
On 9/28/07, Seth Green wrote:
> > As you will see if you load the page below... In IE6 the div remains
> > red, even though it is explicitly set to green in the last rule.
> >
> > It seems that the middle rule, which targets a non-existant class is
> > causing the problem. Remove that, and the div
nobody's got nuthin' ?
Seth Green wrote:
> As you will see if you load the page below... In IE6 the div remains
> red, even though it is explicitly set to green in the last rule.
>
> It seems that the middle rule, which targets a non-existant class is
> causing the problem. Remove that, and the
As you will see if you load the page below... In IE6 the div remains
red, even though it is explicitly set to green in the last rule.
It seems that the middle rule, which targets a non-existant class is
causing the problem. Remove that, and the div is green, even in IE6.
Note: If instead of usi