As far as I know of IE, is that without XSL to tell it how to render the
page, it will display the xml data instead.
That's a feature...
Paul
| -Original Message-
| From: Tim Burgan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2003 10:51 AM
| To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|
The xml prolog (?xml version=1.0 encoding=UTF-8?) throws IE6 into
quirks mode causing it to act like IE5.5 with all its box problems. Add to
that the strict dtd and you find out what unanticipated consequences
means.
You only need to use the prolog when no encoding type is specified: Such a
- Replied Message -
From: Andrew Trusz
: You were getting the code probably because of the combination of quirks,
the
: prolog and strict dtd. That's what the nifty phrase unintended results
can
: mean.
Thanks Andrew,
That whole email was actually very informative.. and I am going to
Nicely coded Tim. Validates perfectly now.
drew
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- Replied Message -
From: Trusz, Andrew
:
: Nicely coded Tim. Validates perfectly now.
:
: drew
Yeah thanks, it validates perfectly, but pity about the appearance!!
Now that I've made the code validate - everything's thrown out of whack -
I've got much learning to do.
Tim Burgan
Tim
Sorry, I hate to be the bringer of bad news, but the page looks awful in
Netscape 7.02. I use the xhtml dtd and coding on my pages, but they
don't look that bad.
!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd;
html