Duncan Hill wrote:
Off-Topic but for clarification RFC 4343 states that URL's are
case-insensitive.
I hate to be picky, but I really do not think that that can be the case.
For a case-sensitive web server, the following two URLs are completely
different :
http://www.example.org/my-f
On 9/25/10 8:17 AM, Chris Blake wrote:
2. And what I really want to know, sneaky, is can I make it so the my
URL always appears in caps? I have emw8.com and I just think it looks
stupid with the 8 sticking up, when really it's the part of the URL I
don't like. I'd much prefer WWW.EMW8.COM.
On Sun, 26 Sep 2010 10:07:58 +0100, Chris Blake
wrote:
Hi,
i am not too fussed about the title transforming because I can just
enter that manually as UC. However I dropped it in so that the question
had something to do with CSS.
From people's answers about the URL being UC it seems th
Hi,
i am not too fussed about the title transforming because I can just
enter that manually as UC. However I dropped it in so that the
question had something to do with CSS.
From people's answers about the URL being UC it seems that it's just
a bad idea - so I'll just have to go normal.
david wrote:
I seem to recall that URLs are not case sensitive?
URLs are case-sensitive, but some parts of them, including the server part,
are defined to be case-insensitive. Whether people know about this is a
different matter. For usability, it is good policy to announce your server
name
Chris Blake wrote:
On 25/09/2010, at 9:13 PM, Kate wrote:
It seems:
Officially Google it doesn’t care about the case:
http://www.searchenginejournal
com/page-title-in-all-caps/10846/#ixzz10Xw5kOAI
52% thinks 'it makes the site stand out', I chose 'It is associated with
spam ' and good lord,
On 25/09/2010, at 9:13 PM, Kate wrote:
It seems:
Officially Google it doesn’t care about the case:
http://www.searchenginejournal
com/page-title-in-all-caps/10846/#ixzz10Xw5kOAI
52% thinks 'it makes the site stand out', I chose 'It is associated
with
spam ' and good lord, 82% think same a
Chris Blake wrote:
P.S. I need to be using sub-script and super-script a fair bit on this
site, any warnings or words of wisdom about doing this?
In my experience, sub- and superscripts only too easily destroy
the regularity of the underlying text grid; in order to re-instate
this regularity
On Jan 24, 2007, at 3:44 AM, Richard Grevers wrote:
>>> http://www.neilp.newwavemedia.co.uk/europe.html
>>> http://www.neilp.newwavemedia.co.uk/stylefile/style1.css
>>>
>>> The capitalize has been added to h1. I can turn it off and do the
>>> capitals freestlye but was wondering if there was a si
On 1/21/07, ~davidLaakso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Christopher Blake wrote:
> > http://www.neilp.newwavemedia.co.uk/europe.html
> > http://www.neilp.newwavemedia.co.uk/stylefile/style1.css
> >
> > The capitalize has been added to h1. I can turn it off and do the
> > capitals freestlye but was wo
I thought IE ignored all psuedo classes except :hover and that only works on
anchors...
Mike
-Original Message-
I thought that first-letter doesn't work in Windows IE 5.x. Not sure about
MAC. Are folks still taking IE 5 issues into account when designing? I've
been working with drop cap
~davidLaakso wrote:
> Try:
> h1{
> /*text-transform: capitalize;*/ <<< delete
> text-transform: lowercase;<<< add
> }
> And add this ruleset to you css:
> h1:first-letter {
> text-transform: uppercase;
I thought that first-letter doesn't work in Windows IE 5.x. Not sure
about MAC. Are fol
Christopher Blake wrote:
> http://www.neilp.newwavemedia.co.uk/europe.html
> http://www.neilp.newwavemedia.co.uk/stylefile/style1.css
>
> The capitalize has been added to h1. I can turn it off and do the
> capitals freestlye but was wondering if there was a simple solution
> to this i.e. withou
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