Do you have a little more context maybe? What is it you're trying to do?
Sounds a bit odd to display a table cell as a block tbh.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 6:35 PM, Anthony Green [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've tried Google and the archives but no luck
I have an issue with IE not applying
How about:
titleThe Times/title
h1Homepage/h1
h2There's water on mars/h2
titleThe Times/title
h1Financial stuff/h1
h2Redmond stock going down further/h2
etc...
Where would one fit in a company logo? Wouldn't a background image be best?
And if so, where?
Matijs
On Sun, Jun 1, 2008
I think you need to use a class that breaks the spaces...
table#cleanTable {
border-collapse:collapse;
}
Michael
Matijs wrote:
Do you have a little more context maybe? What is it you're trying to
do? Sounds a bit odd to display a table cell as a block tbh.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at
Bar charts,
I have a table of data and I would like to use CSS to manipulate it.
FF and Safari have no problem on Mac/Win just IE doesn't alter the display
properties of TDs
Replies from the internal list suggest its another IE Bug
Do you have a little more context maybe? What is it you're
Oh yes, I'm not bothered about Accredations really. More concerned
about the quality of the course and most employers I've come across
are more concerned with your experience.
Cheers again!
2008/6/3 Paul Collins [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi all,
Sorry, I lost this thread. Perhaps you are right about
Hi all,
Sorry, I lost this thread. Perhaps you are right about the online
training with Video. I just find it easier to have someone to ask face
to face - you learn quicker that way.
I'll look into this IRC thingo, never actually taken a look.
Thanks for your replies.
Paul
2008/6/3 Jennie K
On 3 Jun 2008, at 07:04, Matijs wrote:
How about:
titleThe Times/title
h1Homepage/h1
h2There's water on mars/h2
titleThe Times/title
h1Financial stuff/h1
h2Redmond stock going down further/h2
etc...
Where would one fit in a company logo? Wouldn't a background image
be best? And
My 2 pence ...
titlePage title - Site title/title
div id=brand
pimg alt=Site title ... //p
/div
div id=content
h1Page Title/h1
...
/div
div id=search
h1Search/h1
form ...
/div
div id=nav
h1Navigation/h1
ul ...
/div
2008/6/3 Rick Lecoat [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On 3 Jun
To throw another question in here, should the page title therefore be
different to the main heading of the page? I thought the content in
the page title should be as specific as possible for SEO, including
the heirarchy?
So, for example
titleSite title - Section Title - Page title/title
And
For the title you should really switch it around so that it is more specific
to the page, and will be much better for SEO purposes.
titlePage title - Section Title - Site title/title
For the Logo h1 aspect, I would personally use the gilder/levin image
replacement technique, using within this
On 3 Jun 2008, at 12:29, Paul Collins wrote:
Once you have it in the title tag, does it matter whether you have the
logo in a H1 or not? Should you have something different between the
title and main heading?
I would think that this starts to enter the realm of information that
is
I do feel this is all rather subjective and depends on what you're
building, that is until you consider SEO; which I feel flies in the
face of Web Standards
2008/6/3 Stewart Griffiths [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
For the title you should really switch it around so that it is more specific
to the page,
On 3 Jun 2008, at 12:55, Darren West wrote:
I do feel this is all rather subjective and depends on what you're
building, that is until you consider SEO; which I feel flies in the
face of Web Standards
I agree that much of this stuff is, inevitably, subjective. Web
standards gives us a good
To be clear, my statement, which was quite sweeping, was meant to
express that when a site is built for computers as opposed to humans
then that to me flies in the face of Web Standards. So I agree :-)
2008/6/3 Rick Lecoat [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On 3 Jun 2008, at 12:55, Darren West wrote:
I do
Hope this is not OT!
My parent company, Hoop Associates, are looking for a standards-savvy
Digital Project Manager and a LAMP Web Developer to complement our
expanding digital team.
Full details here: http://www.thisishoop.com/careers
Thank You
==
Joe Ortenzi
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
In Magento, they use
address.../address
for customer address.
It lacks flexibility for styling as I can't have other html tags place
inside the address tag. I wonder if there is a semantical way to do
it and that it produces no validation error. Also, if any of you have
started
Hi Tee,
In Magento, they use
address.../address
for customer address.
afaik, the address element is not supposed to contain this kind of
information as it is related to the people who maintain/are responsible
for the document itself (or a section of the document).
It lacks flexibility
Thierry Koblentz wrote:
Hi Tee,
In Magento, they use
address.../address
for customer address.
afaik, the address element is not supposed to contain this kind of
information as it is related to the people who maintain/are responsible
for the document itself (or a section of the
There are no limitations with Magento when it comes to templates /
layout etc. So you could easily implement hcard.
Cheers
Adam (www.tweakmag.com)
tee wrote:
In Magento, they use
address.../address
for customer address.
It lacks flexibility for styling as I can't have other html tags place
Thierry
afaik, the address element is not supposed to contain this kind of
information as it is related to the people who maintain/are
responsible
for the document itself (or a section of the document).
It's a plain English but I read it many times, still I don't quite
understand what
Thanks for the posting. Next time include the location, and are they
looking for only British passport holders? For anyone wondering, it's in
London.
Hope this is not OT!
My parent company, Hoop Associates, are looking for a standards-savvy
Digital Project Manager and a LAMP Web Developer to
On Jun 3, 2008, at 4:49 PM, tee wrote:
Thierry
afaik, the address element is not supposed to contain this kind of
information as it is related to the people who maintain/are
responsible
for the document itself (or a section of the document).
It's a plain English but I read it many
ADMIN - THREAD CLOSED
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If you would like a job posted to the group, email me off list and the
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of tee
Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 4:49 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] styling address tag or microformat hcard
Thierry
afaik, the address element is not supposed to contain
I've just spent a bit of time looking at how background-position works
when expressed as a percentage:
background-position: 90%;
and I'm wondering why it works the way it does.
Here's the best way I can describe the effect of (90%, x-axis)
positioning with percentages: to position the image
On Wed, Jun 4, 2008 at 8:01 AM, John Horner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've just spent a bit of time looking at how background-position works
when expressed as a percentage:
background-position: 90%;
and I'm wondering why it works the way it does.
Here's the best way I can describe the
Does anyone know why [bg image positioning] was created that way,
and/or can you tell me if there's some very useful thing this rule
allows you to do?
As Alex pointed out this is the way to use if you want to right-align or
bottom-align a bg image. Also for horizontal/vertical centering this is
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