Although I believe all the options described to be acceptable, I recall some browsers having issues when using/not using quotes...Here are some quick google results, both relating to IE 5 Mac:
I disagree, this is a real accessibility issue. As Patrick said, if the element being coloured is not conveying any information (eg. the background to a div) then it's not a problem, however in the example you gave, it is.
Aside from dodgey monitors, some people cannot read text that does not have
Whoops, re-reading that, Bob wasn't disagreeing with the accessibility part... sorry Bob!I would imagine however, that the title of a page is fairly important?On 4/7/06,
Daniel Nitsche [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I disagree, this is a real accessibility issue. As Patrick said, if the element being
Hi Stuart,1. I'm not sure the uppercase text in the tiny font works that well. I think you can get away with it for the sub headings, but it's difficult to read (try a bigger font-size, with mixed case text).
2. The introductory paragraph is a bit lengthy. Why not just cut it down to Introducing
I had a quick go, and this is what I came up with (assuming a 100x100px image):dl dtProduct title/dt ddProduct description - this can be as long as you like/dd
ddimg src="" alt=product title/dd/dlstyle dl { position: relative; } dl dt { margin-left: 110px; font-weight: bold; }
dl dd {
Great work!The only (very minor) issue I can see, is the image is not vertically aligned when the product title wraps to two lines, but as you have written, you can adjust the width to suit.Also works in Firefox and Konqueror (Linux).
Daniel NitscheOn 4/5/06, Richard Czeiger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I remember this being a Safari bug, but few people seemed to know about it at the time.These may help:http://tinyurl.com/d8zfnhttp://tinyurl.com/7z8tf
Daniel NitscheOn 3/28/06, Samuel Richardson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'd try replacing the element that the anchor is on if possible, maybeattach