Agreed Jason, totally blind users may be small in number but turning away
those with partial sight could hurt your clients bottom line; the trick is
to invite in the "missing" 11% without making the site so boring that
"normal" users wander off elsewhere.
Further it may help to widen the access
Talking about this or that shopping cart may be a long way off topic for
this place; but the underlying question is so similar to one a raised a few
weeks ago (re PHP libraries) I will step in again.
Our focus here should be web standards; the problem is that sometimes the
tools or systems we u
Not sure web users would care a whole lot if the heading was prices or price
list.
Thanks for the debate chaps; I have struggled over this issue on and off for
some time and this has helped me to define a simple rule which works for me.
[The rule]If the list has multiple columns check beca
eager questioners such as Michael suggest that
they take the conversation off the forum; but please bring it back when a
conclusion has been reached as I suspect I lot of equally eager thread
watchers may be keen to know the answer too.
I will now return to lurking
Regards
Ian Chamberlain
ex
My memory is fading fast Joe, but as I recall our first windows based web
server (from Bob Denny's book) fixed the 8.3 limitation.
We did continue creating .htm for a while after that but only out of habit.
I can't remember the exact date but I would quess that we have been largely
free from th
The W3C's own site is full of four letter suffixs Rob. not that that means
anything.
I would doubt what they are saying, but then where I came from CMS and web
standards were on different planets.
- Original Message -
From: Rob Enslin
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Wedn
I fumbled with this for a while Chris but decided against it on the grounds
that denotes the most important content on the page; the site ownerthe
logo may think that his or her logo is the most important element on the page,
I doubt any site users would agree.
I know we have to be pragmatic
t is wrong in the php.
> Then, you check for best practice too . . .
>
> Bob
>
>
>
> Ian Chamberlain wrote:
>> Fingers crossed this is not too far off topic; being a newby to PHP;
>> any clues where I can find how-to's, snippets, libraries or even
>> a
Fingers crossed this is not too far off topic; being a newby to PHP; any
clues where I can find how-to's, snippets, libraries or even application
suites built from PHP that are built to a good minimum standard please.
I am guessing that PHP is much like JavaScript in that a lot of what is
float
I tend to use a good old unordered list for such things Bob.
- Original Message -
From: "Designer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2008 10:03 AM
Subject: [WSG] The Problem of adjacent links
I have run into a problem with having two adjacent links at the top of a
page.
James, why not take advantage of the free 30 trial of Dreamweaver?
- Original Message -
From: James Jeffery
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Friday, April 04, 2008 12:19 PM
Subject: [WSG] Dreamweaver CS3
I've been thinking about buying the new version of Photoshop and I
Jeremy, is your client really looking for "pixel perfection"
I note you are also looking for a person who is passionate and has a thorough
understanding of web design; such a person may have difficulty with pixel
perfection.
- Original Message -
From: Jeremy Champion
To: wsg@
I must be having a stupid attack as I can't find anywhere on the site where
I can register and then comment.
As for the left / right - Accessibility/ Freedom agrument (it doesn't
deserve to be called a debate) it leaves me with the feeling that I would
not wish to be trapped in a lift (elevato
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