ADMIN
Hi all,
The conversation has been great, but we are now heading into heated
discussion and direct attacks - which is unacceptable. Please remain
civil and receptive or the thread will be closed.
Thanks
Russ
(civility police)
***
Hi,
Sorry you lost your file.
As a precaution in the future I'd recommend installing some sort of
version control e.g. svn can seem a bit daunting to install or overkill
for 1-2 people but in the long run it is well worth it.
cheers
L
Nour Alsafar wrote:
Hi
please if anyone can help me i
On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 2:32 PM, tee wrote:
> Do you include a second H1 on the page too? No?
>>
> A bit arrogant question. Guess you think people who use h1 for logo don't
> know anything about semantic markup :)
>
>
tee,
thry this on for size. from the w3c html elements about what an h1
refere
> Do you include a second H1 on the page too? No?
A bit arrogant question. Guess you think people who use h1 for logo don't
know anything about semantic markup :)
Not really considering that's the topic of the discussion. The orginal post
is about placing an h1 around the logo and then using an
I've had good luck with FatFreeCart for simple, non-demanding situations.
http://www.fatfreecart.com/
- Original Message -
From: hed...@digitalessence.net
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Saturday, October 17, 2009 2:34 PM
Subject: [WSG] Online shop package recommendations
On Oct 19, 2009, at 11:45 AM, Darren Lovelock wrote:
No-one has said there is anything wrong with including a tagline on
every
page.
My point wasn't arguing that someone said it's wrong to t include a
tagline on every page. It's more about this: in some situations, logo
use in the websit
No-one has said there is anything wrong with including a tagline on every
page.
It is a bad idea however if you make it a H1 and then have that repeat on
every page.
Do you include a second H1 on the page too? No?
When you add a background image to a H1 - you may style it to look like an
image
On Oct 18, 2009, at 10:06 AM, Christian Fagan wrote:
Agree with pretty much everything below.
There seems to be no compelling reason to wrap the logo in a
H1but there seems to be no compelling reason not to.
Quite a number of my clients have taglines in their logos, and often
times,