This element is generally 'unstylable' for security reasons; namely
ensuring the user is aware of what they're doing.
Did you search first?
http://www.google.com/search?q=CSS+input+type%3D%22file%22&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official
The first result is abou
On 1/24/06, Peter Levan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Without the MIME type set the file displays like a text file in the browser
> window, however we want the download requestor to appear when accessing a
> file of this type as the file is useless when viewed as straight text as it
> is a data file
Best new bit of knowledge for me in 2005?
XSL.
If you know and enjoy using CSS, dive into XSL; it'll rock your world :)
hoping everyone has a safe and happy holiday season,
Andrew.
On 12/19/05, Terrence Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> how would/do you markup the source attribution for data tables when there
> is already a caption?
How about using the element? You could code it as:
Summary of Key Indicators
My sincerest apologies to the group regarding the links in my previous post.
Youthful naivety shines through once more :-o
Please keep any further abuse off-list; it's not relevant to the thread. :)
On 10/17/05, Mark Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Andrew Krespanis wrote:
&g
On 10/17/05, Mordechai Peller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> One of the best books on JavaScript is: "JavaScript: The Definitive
> Guide," by David Flanagan (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.)
Couldn't agree more. A fantastic reference manual that will remain on
my desk for years to come.
Here's the comp
On 10/9/05, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> That's totally irrelevant. If 2 days ago you knew your article was flawed
> then why posting a link to it?
I only mentioned it because it was published exactly 365 days earlier
on a very similar topic (linking CSS to html files). I was amus
On 10/8/05, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm sorry, but this doesn't make sense at all. Or is there an important
> detail I'm missing? ;)
Yes, you're missing the part where this was written over 12 months ago
by someone who had only built 3 sites and wanted to try and help other
b
sage ------
From: Andrew Krespanis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Oct 7, 2005 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: [WSG] Say no to CSS hacks with branching techniques
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
On 10/7/05, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would appreciate your feedback so
On 10/7/05, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would appreciate your feedback so I can improve this article:
> http://www.tjkdesign.com/articles/branching.asp
Sure, but I'm in a hurry so please excuse me if I'm a bit short with
my reponse :)
> Congratulations! Now your file is ready
> Serously, what is it? Outline markup?
Yes.
When mentioning XOXO @ WE'05, Tantek described it as a replacement for
OPML. (that's the mark-up language usually used to store browser
bookmarks, for those following along at home ;)
hth,
Andrew.
---
http://leftjustified.net/
On 10/3/05, Joshua Street <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So... is there any way to define this relationship? Or is it just
> order-of-content and hoping it makes sense? What if you were to put the
> cite after the quote for whatever reason (style guide convention, etc)?
Sorry Josh, there's no attrib
On 9/28/05, Tom Livingston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 15:18:16 -0400, Joseph R. B. Taylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > CSS solution: Put the flash movie into a div, then set the big
> > background image you'd use for the movie as the background image on the
> > div. Ba
> How about a secret password that you have to sneak into the first 60 seconds
> of meeting someone :)..?
Or how about everyone interested just bites the bullet and posts their
photo & contact details like I just did?
This secret handshake/signalling in crowded room nonsense isn't going to work.
EDIT: Whoops, that first URL should be http://notinteractive.wordpress.com/
I own notinteractive.com too, but I can't find the FTP details atm and
there's no redirect to the wordpress sub-domain...
Good thing I don't do this stuff for a living! Oh, wait a minute 0_o
On
I'm going.
Will be doing a little 'live-bloggin' on http://notinteractive.com/
and more professional coverage on http://leftjustified.net/
I'll be up there from Wednesday night and would be keen to catch up
with other WSG members for some warm up drinks :)
Photo: http://static.flickr.com/18/241860
On 9/19/05, Titanilla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> strangely enough, the lovely tutorial seems pretty different from the
> stylesheet of the site...
> E.g. the tutorial starts with
>
> div#outer {
> width:94%;
> min-width:40em;
> max-width:70em;
> }
>
> explaining the benefits of using per
On 9/9/05, Christian Montoya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The ideal would be that your markup can have divitis, but when parsed by a
> screen reader or a printing device or something else, you tell it something
> along the lines of:
>
> div {
> visibilty:hidden;
> }
That will hide all child
On 9/9/05, Paul Bennett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> although I foresee browsing with that extension may be a version of hell for
> many of us - can you imagine seeing the html errors for *every* page you
> viewed?
I already see the HTML errors for every page I view [1].
The real nightmare i
On 9/8/05, russ - maxdesign <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dunno about that but I know of two silly alternatives:
>
> A remote control device done in CSS:
> http://www.maxdesign.com.au/presentation/remote/remote-new.htm
>
> An IPod emulator:
> http://www.podsites.com/emulator-result.cfm
...and if
On 9/8/05, Craig Rippon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Have filed a formal complaint against the instructor (who happens to run 10
> I am no longer attending his classes and may not get my Diploma.
Hi Craig,
Don't let it get you down, I went through exactly the same thing in
'03-'04 while attending
Aaaah, I over thought the situation -- I thought you wanted to *fade*
between the images, not just choose one at random...
Here you go :)
function randomBG(targetObjID) {
var obj, imgs, randNum;
obj = document.getElementById(targetObjID);
imgs = new Array();
img
On 8/24/05, Bennie, Jack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone know any neat code [JScript/CSS - not PHP] that can randomly
> load a selection of images into the 'background-image' selector?
Should be simple. Merely dig up any decent image fade script and
replace the 'image swap' with this:
/
Sorry for the double post, merely a quick clarification :)
> There's a much better term for it in the spec, but alas I'm
> not in the mood for spec. trawling at the moment
The proper explaination is that floated elements without an intrinsic
width[1] must have one declared in CSS.
For a detail
On 8/18/05, Bennie, Jack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Got a simple one, but can't seem to get my head round it
> I'm after a 2 column setup, one fixed width and the other fluid.
> I'm pretty sure it's something simple, but it's the end of the day and I
> can't spot it! Any ideas? I need to k
Hey mate :)
Interesting question, I think this one comes down to the dev environment...
If you're the only person who will be working on this (ie: it's a
personal project) then using what you've got and adding an informative
comment would be enough.
On the other hand, if I saw this at work I woul
> That is exactly what I was thinking of. Do you know what the support is for
> this statement?
Support for page break control via CSS is pathetic, especially if your
trying to set orphan/widow rules.
Spec: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/page.html
-Andrew
--
http://lef
Thanks for clearing that up Ben!
Always glad to be told I'm wrong if I can walk away from it having
learnt something ;)
Cheers,
Andrew.
On 8/3/05, Ben Curtis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is outdated information, apparently. I had heard the same, and
> was curious if things had changed since
On 8/2/05, Ben Curtis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Good catch. Now we're talking a good excuse for regular expressions.
> Instead of my recommendation of:
>
> a[i].getAttribute('href').toUpperCase().indexOf("HTTP://") == 0
>
> ...I now recommend:
>
> /^https?:\/\//i.test(a[i].getAtt
Whooa nelly!
!important -- not adding a 'for' attribute kills half the purpose of
using a 0_o
Without a for attrib, clicking the label will not affect
(focus/activate) the input element nested within. This is especially
important in the case of checkboxes and radio buttons as the label
p
> 1. Maybe use "search" instead of query as a label for the search form.
Maybe use "Find" instead of search or query (then again, your target
audience is developers, so query is part of their vocab). 'Search'
suggests that a 'hunt and peck/ hit and miss" activity will follow.
More important than
Something similar to this came up at work last week and I think it
would be good to tack it on to this thread (hopefully there's enough
relevance!).
The problem was that we wanted to handle links to non-html files in a
different manner than regular links. Ideally, it shouldn't require any
more eff
On 7/30/05, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I think you ought to check specifically that 'http://' is at the
> > beginning of the string.
>
> Good point, I'll change this.
A more reusable approach would be to check for '://', as this is what
differentiates 'mailto:', relative path
Here's your solution :)
http://www.sitepoint.com/print/1041
hth,
Andrew.
On 7/29/05, Andrew Ivin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've been looking for a resource that explains how to open a new
> browser window by using the rel attribute in the html, which then
> calls on js to apply t
> Has anyone made a stylesheet that resets everything back to the way it
> would be if styling pure XML?
Here you go:
* {
margin:0;
padding:0;
display:inline;
font:1em serif;
}
To quote your CSS file:
"And I didn't reset everything to inline, because then it's hard to
tell what's what."
> what are you guys using as a base css file to start a site with common hacks
> and what not?
http://leftjustified.net/journal/2004/10/07/css-negotiation/
and
http://leftjustified.net/journal/2004/10/19/global-ws-reset/
Couldn't help myself ;)
Andrew.
http:
Other fixes for this problem are as follows:
li { position:relative; }
li { height:1%; }
li { zoom:1.0; }
Applying borders may also fix the problem, I haven't tested that one
as it's a bad solution anyway -- changing the design to fix a bug
isn't cool at all; plus IE can't handle transparent bord
> Video is still in the works. We'll probably be looking for volunteers
> later on to help us caption the sucker...
We've just got to wait for the AV team to have some spare time to
digitise it so I can take it home and edit it into something worthy of
upload (Don't worry Ben, I'll overdub you wit
On this topic, I've recently picked up a copy or 'Javascript -- The
Definitive Guide' published by O'Reilly. This book came highly
recommended to me by the best scripters I know.
Having read the first 220 pages over the weekend, I can honestly say
that it will have a place on my desk whenever I'm w
If all goes to plan (and it has so far), this tuesday's Brisbane WSG
meeting will be filmed with the intention of offering it up for WSG
members.
If anyone wants to volunteer to do the captioning that would be
awesome, otherwise some of the locals will probably draw straws for
it... (don't be afr
Heh, well if the blockquote approach is considered overkill, you'll
choke on what I actually use for my comments...
Andrew said:
This is my comment. It is the definition of 'Andrew
said' within this context.
Comment posted on:
9:15 am, 28th of May
On 5/24/05, Ben Curtis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Canada
> In The Game, Inc.
> Customer Service
> 135 West Beaver Creek Road Box #604
> Richmond Hill
> ON
> L4B 1C0
>
I think that one would have to qualify as improper use of a .
The
Either these guys did the design, or your old employers stole their
'standards' page directly from here:
http://www.figdesign.com/site.html
I love running corporate standards BS through Google -- then you can
see where it really came from ;)
Andrew.
http://leftju
> I was wondering whether it is better to use the import command in the main
> style sheet and import the other style sheets that way or to have multiple
> link hrefs to stylesheets or whether it makes no difference how you do it.
@import will stop working at 2 levels deep (an @imported stylesheet
Ooops! I really shouldn't leave things half-baked like that.
If the link in question doesn't do anything without javascript, it is
a wise idea to have it written to the page using js as well.
We don't want any orphan UI elements, do we ;)
And I even tested this one :]
//let the code begin---
On 5/9/05, john <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>create a link that says "hide content" and it will remove a section
of text from the
> page. The layout uses some tables (XHTML Transitional), so it would
> have to hide three 's and shift the content below it up.
>
> Can somebody please instruct me on
David R wrote:
> Suppose you have a element and give it 5 background images and a
> background color:
[...]
> ...Wouldn't the background colour of the element show through the
> transparency of the image, thus rendering any round-corner images using
> transparency useless?
Yes, that is my underst
Too late, it's already in there:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/WD-css3-background-20050216/#the-background-image
Most of the modules are at working draft stage, see the lot here:
http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/current-work
Andrew.
http://leftjustified.net/
On Wed, 16 F
> > Actually " is an inch symbol. For quotes we should use “ and
> > ” in normal text.
True typographical double quotes are ‘ and ’
Single quotes are ‘ and ’
XML parsers are only required to recognise a few named entities
(&, < etc) so you should get used to using numbered entities
now...
Andre
Buh?
Try position:relative;
Wild guess, but always worth a try
On Wed, 16 Feb 2005 10:02:28 +1000, Josh McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey, I've managed to somehow get an unclickable text field in
> explorer. It's in a float:right div, and unfloating the div fixes the
> problem, but I've
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 20:21:58 -, Kornel Lesinski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> No... he used word "compatibility",
> which means that all bugs must remain untouched.
Here's a quote from the press release:
"Internet Explorer 7.0, designed to add new levels of security to
Windows XP SP2 while mai
> > note to all: IF IN DOUBT, add position:relative; -- it fixes many,
> > many IE bugs :)
>
> Would it be excessive or treacherous to declare for Win IE:
>
> * html * { position:relative; }
Yes, I think so. One instance I can think of is that links within a
scrolling div will not scroll
> Web Essentials will definitely be on again. Russ, Peter Maxine and I
> are working hard to put together an even better event this year.
Best. News. Ever (well, not quite, but close ;)
Excuse me while I dance around the office like a complete idiot..
Can't wait to see the line-up,
Andrew.
On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 22:31:48 -0600, Mani Sheriar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The H1 for the first article (at the top left) does not display in IE.
> It does not show up at all, even though the code is exactly the same as
> it is for the following two articles. What shows up is just blank white
On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 09:35:14 +1000, Josh McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Secondly - I consider myself fairly well versed in the voodoo that is
> javascript, but what in the flamin hell is that IE7 script? I got
> halfway down the thing adding spacing and indentation in the hope it
> would bec
Well, that was interesting...
It would seem after spending most of the time discussing how to get
around IE's bugs, IE got its revenge by failing to load an integral
part of the design.
To those who attended: the problem is solved now, I've removed the old
min-max script and put in Dean Edward's I
a:visited:hover {
...styles...
}
OR
a:visited::hover { ... }
(double colon is CSS3 syntax)
Untested, but theoretically it should work...
Andrew.
http://leftjustified.net/
On Tue, 08 Feb 2005 18:40:34 -0800, Andreas Boehmer
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I w
You need to clear your floats.
Check this: http://www.positioniseverything.net/easyclearing.html
(technique discovered by WSG member Tony Aslett ;)
Andrew.
--
http://leftjustified.net/
**
The discussion list for http
OOPS! I just swore on list
SORRY :)
http://leftjustified.net/
**
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
for some hints on posting to the
> Well I suggest you name names and show examples of compliant html 4.01 that
> doesn't show 100% of the intented content and doesn't at least resemble like
> what you intented.
Compliant html pages styled completely with CSS displaying bugs? Easy,
I would make some examples for you now if I wasn't
On Tue, 8 Feb 2005 07:06:21 +0100, Andy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If your code is compliant then just about every browser out there will be
> able to generate
> it with a 90% accuracy regarding design and 100% accuracy regarding content.
What kind of make believe web do you design for? Ever
While you could just nest the in the as fallback (is
that valid nesting? Unsure about iframes..), fallback content often
doesn't work due to users having the flash plugin but having flash
content blocked by a browser plugin.
Another way to do it would be to use a flash detection script like this
> >Your problem occurs when you have the border-top: 0; after the border
> >statement.
>Is this a Gecko bug, I wonder?
I doubt it, more likely that border-top:0; is incorrect use of the
shorthand property.
'border-top' is supposed to receive 3 values, border-top-width is what
you would use to set
Your :hover changes on menus create a contrast shift that is far too small.
In short, make the :hover background lighter and text darker so we can
still read the menu :)
On Fri, 4 Feb 2005 19:21:31 +1100, Brendan Smith
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greetings all,
>
> I'm currently working on a we
> Is it possible (without using flash transparency) to display html on top of
> a Flash Element in Firefox?
It sure is Barry, but it requires a bit of sneaky JS...
http://dotnetjunkies.com/WebLog/jking/archive/2003/07/21/488.aspx
The layout looks pretty broken these days, but the content is stil
Try this:
ul.sm_menu li {
position:relative;
}
I had the same problem on greatpikespeakbirdingtrail.org, and that was the fix.
The dissapearing BG bug is another one from the 'hasLayout' family. I
HATE hasLayout, it is IE's worst "feature"
Andrew.
http://le
Hi group :)
The proposed presentation for the February meeting is "some of the
technical aspects of CSS" â a title invented by the good people at WSG
to account for my slackness ;)
The presentation I will be giving is "Site in an Hour â Studying the
workflow of CSS development". I will be present
For min/max width/height in IE5+, I use this:
http://www.doxdesk.com/software/js/minmax.html
It's simple, it works, what more could you ask for?
Andrew.
http://leftjustified.net/
**
The discussion list for http:
Simply remove the !important. If both selectors have the same
specifity, the last one in the source order (or last to be imported)
will (*should*) take precedence.
On Sat, 29 Jan 2005 08:33:03 +0200, Jacobus van Niekerk
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Anybody have a solution for the following:
>
I remember reading a quote from a Google tech. stating that while
their system is capable of reading/interpreting CSS, they don't do so
due to the excess load it would create.
I also remember the same quote mentioning something about sites only
getting penalised if someone lodges a complaint agains
On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 13:51:35 -0330, Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a template that I have created and am creating all my pages from
> that. I have named this file x.html but when I try and rename it to
> x.php, because I have some dynamic content on it, nothing displays. Any
> ideas why t
> http://www.yourdomain.tld"/audio/your.snd";
> type="MIME/GoesHere" />
>
> ...Thats only from the top of my head, you'll have to check to see if it
> works, of course, but that should work in browsers that interpret the
> tag appropriatley
Browsers that interpret the object tag correctly... You
On Wed, 19 Jan 2005 02:08:53 +0100, JohnyB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > a span { display: block; text-indent: -999em; }
>
> is this safe? (won't it bring some scrollbars somehow etc.?)
I've never gotten that technique to work properly in Opera. It always either
a) makes scrollbars
b) display
On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 19:47:53 -0200, Bruno Torres <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But you can hide the css from it also using
> link, providing two media types separated bya a comma and a space:
>
Sorry for being anal, but multiple media attrib values are to be
seperated by a comma _only_, adding a
Hi all :)
I'm going to be the speaker for the Feb 9th WSG meeting in Brisbane
and I am undecided between two possible topics. Take a look at the two
options and let me know your preference. You can let me know off list
if you prefer.
option 1.
"Safely Hacking CSS" Making sites that work now and
On Sat, 15 Jan 2005 23:12:57 +, Patrick H. Lauke
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The "most correct way" (tm):
>
>
> Search Club Listings
> Name of club
>
> State
>
> ...
>
>
>
What about s to seperate t
> > Don't think this has been mentioned anywhere yet, but one issue I
> > found with
> > this, was that within dropdowns the "downarrow" GUI, covers some of
> > the text
> > on the right. Here is the fix for that:
> >
> > option {
> > padding-right:1em;
> > }
Indeed, that is an issue, but to
On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 10:03:58 +, Andy Budd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> IE5 has a bug that can put extra space between list items. Setting the
> li to be inline fixes this issue.
Setting height:1%; also fixes that bug.
Zoom:1.0; fixes the bug in IE 5.5 and 6, but not 5.0 (plus it's
invalid CSS
Hmmm
This may sound insane, but if the element is adding whitespace, try
style {
display:none;
}
in the IE 5.0 styles.
If that stops the style element from working (?), try height:1px;
I've never heard of this before, but my suggestion could be worth a try...
I'm guessing you're using
Whoops, should have read your code a bit more before hitting 'send'
Making the following change will give you better support in IE and
Opera while also keeping the arrow centered regardless of font-size -
> .mainleft ul li {
> padding: 0px 0px 0px 25px;
> background:transparent u
> I am trying to have an unordered list that is styled nicely with an arrow
> graphic, however now I get the arrow graphic in my ordered list as well.
Descendant selectors are your friend...
.mainleft ul li {
padding: 0px 0px 0px 25px;
background: url(images/bullet.gif) no-repeat
> http://www.w3.org/2003/12/semantic-extractor.html
> Great tool
Absolutely, but with a major flaw (imho)
It completely ignores tables, period. If I point it at my homepage
(leftjustified.net), it gives a good outline of the page but makes no
mention of the well structured, correctly labelled data
> Tricia Fitzgerald wrote:
> > Does anyone know of a "whimsical" font that works in all browsers? I've
> > tried "Kidprint" but that does
> > not work on any of the Mac browsers nor AOL on the pc.
font-family: fantasy; --- guaranteed to be 'whimsical' on any browser...
...and also very nasty (th
Aaah, the accessibility validators chestnut... I'm surprised Patrick
and Derek and haven't dropped in on this thread yet ;)
Unfortunately machines can't check for accessiblity. Really, they can't.
Until they do checks like rendering pages and making sure link targets
aren't incredibly small, (eg:
On Thu, 6 Jan 2005 16:07:32 +1000, Barry Beattie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> didn't I read somewhere that the next IE browser will be with the next OS
> (longhorn) in 2006?
> anyone confirm that?
> cheers
>
> barry.b
G'day Barry ;D
That's the official word; though your 2006 delivery date is
I dig all the changes so far :D
Good work Patrick, and congrats on getting an 'A-list blogger' as a client!
Andrew.
http://leftjustified.net/
**
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
See http://
' >' is CSS for 'child of'. In this instance - html>#wrap - it means
any element with an id of 'wrap' that is a child of the html element.
The reason they've used it here is probably because IE does not
understand that selector, so it will ignore the rule.
Hope that cleared it up a bit for you :)
' >' is CSS for 'child of'. In this instance - html>#wrap - it means
any element with an id of 'wrap' that is a child of the html element.
The reason they've used it here is probably because IE does not
understand that selector, so it will ignore the rule.
Hope that cleared it up a bit for you :)
> Try and float just #contentLeft or #contentRight, but not both.
There's nothing wrong with floating all your columns. In fact, I
always float both columns as I find it more reliable than using
margins/padding to clear adjacent cols.
This article will solve your problem. Apply the hack to your
You say you want the first line smaller than the second, but your css
will do exactly the opposite (once the selectors are fixed):
.pmi {
font-size: 1.5em;
}
.pmi p:first-line {
font-size: 1.2em;
}
Let me explain; if your default font size is 10px (it's not, but this
is just an eg.), p
> OT: Does anyone else think the Garden needs some sort of rating system
> or better categorisation? When there was only ~30 it was fine. But now
> there's ~520. A lot will never get seen, and that probably includes some
> really good examples that should be.
[also OT]
What the garden really need
> It is that sense of seeing art at the cutting-edge of science that makes us
> go "wow".
Good point John, I can't argue with that :) The backgrounds are great,
the css is cutting edge. That doesn't make it a great design though.
> Could the people who think it is so non-wow, please explain to us
I know I'm way out on a limb with this one, but the ocean thing really
doesn't do anything for me... The diver/flashlight effect is cool
(even though it looks a bit nasty as it goes over the gradient) and
the rendered ocean floor has really nice lighting, but besides that...
Comments like "I'm not
> Hmm...it doesn't seem to affect IE 5 or 5.5 (admittedly using skyx' multiple
> IE installations on a Win2k machine natively running 6) on
> www.salford.ac.uk
> though. Maybe just depends on a variety of factors, not sure...
Hmmm indeed ;)
When I get home from work I'll find the exact bug and l
> On Tuesday, November 30, 2004 10:19 AM, Patrick Lauke wrote:
> >
> > And you can group the above and save yourself repetition. In one
> > of my stylesheets, for instance, I have
> >
> > #navbar li a:focus,
> > #navbar li a:hover,
> > #navbar a:active {
> > background: #fbfbfb;
> > }
>
> I se
John's interview proved what Doug Bowman stated in an earlier blog
post - "You can't speak to an Australian without them bringing up a
Simpsons quote"
Now that I know where the name came from, my stomach will turn every
time I visit your site :)
Andrew.
http://lef
I like it :) Easy to read, I found items of interest quickly, all good
from that side.
Two small problems though -- the ultra wide search input looks bad as
it overhangs the sidebar at anything more than 75% text-size (Moz1.7)
Also, the bottom radii of the sidebar are messy -- the curves have
jagge
Thanks for the free copy of Style Master! :D
I've never been a fan of web design IDEs, but I'm sure going to give
this one a good run for its money.
Thanks again,
Andrew.
--
http://leftjustified.net/
**
The discussion list for http://webstandard
> Another is to add a 1px border of the same colour as the container - depends
> on your need.
Or even
border:1px solid transparent;
Andrew
http://leftjustified.net/
**
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.
Strange, it doesn't show in Firefox 1PR, Moz1.7 or IE -- but you're
right, the button is still there, it just isn't being rendered...
When I tried to edit your CSS live (web dev ext.) the page lost the
the plot so I really couldn't test out this theory:
Try adding position:relative; and z-index:10;
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