On 9/7/06, Kevin Futter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ironically, I actually *do* use #topNav a lot, but I selected this name in
the context of top *level* nav, rather than top *positioned* nav. It never
occurred to me that this might be semantically ambiguous. I guess
#primaryNav becomes the better
David Dixon wrote:
A few people have pointed out that they use the .leftNav etc because
they are more useful to their clients and I would agree that .leftNav is
far more obvious than .col1. However, those names are only useful until
the site needs a redesign/restructure (actually 3 months later
Hi!The scroller is automatic, regardless of rollovers. It has also been done in flash, no markup trickery there!ElliotOn 9/4/06, Helen Rysavy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi
I really like how this site has the image changing as you roll over the bulleted items. Does anyone know how they
Too right.
I can't find the exact resource, but a combination of absolutely and
relatively positions images within the link elements should create
this kind of effect.
Something like this (untested):
html
head
style type=text/css
body { padding: 20px; background-color: #ccc; }
#alpha {
That's for a navbar, unless I'm mistaken I'm quite sure we're
discussing the disjointed-rollover effect here.
Elliot
On 9/4/06, Ido [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The tutorial to which you are referring has been copied (with and without
credits to the original author) by many sites. Basically, set
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