Kay said
> What I would do in your situation is hide the css
> from Netscape 4 completely by using either the media="all"
> attribute on your link tag, or @@import syntax.
Jackie Reid said:
>I actually dont really understand that stuff *cringe
> with embarrasment* I know i read up on it at some
Ben Smith said:
>To Kay: how do you eliminate the whitespace that CF processing adds? I
>could never figure out an easy way to do it reliably..
Well, I use Fusebox, so all my non-display code is tucked away into cfinclude files
with tags applied liberally.
While I know that a few bytes don't m
Folks,
Discussion of coding practices is all well & good, but I think it's getting
a bit off topic.
If you'd like to continue the discussion, I've setup a thread in the
discussion room for it:
http://discuss.webstandardsgroup.org/archives/13.htm
Please post any further comments there.
Than
Kay said
>What I would do in your situation is hide the css from Netscape 4
completely by using either the media="all" attribute on your link tag, or
@@import syntax.
I actually dont really understand that stuff *cringe with embarrasment* I
know i read up on it at some stage but as usual can't rem
"heavy plastic shell of the PDA with a carbon fiber shell weighing 25% or
less of the original and again costing 100x as much.
-Original Message-
From: Leo J. O'Campo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 12:21 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] Co
Hi Brian,
I moved this onto a "trimming the fat" thread as I felt it was moving
off topic from Jackie's post.
Out of interest how much are you working with/sharing these files in a
team environment?
With the generally varying levels of skills (especially with CSS) in
most teams I'd say that "
J. O'Campo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 12:04 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] Constructive Criticism please
Sure Hugh
Any good programmer would never leave it off because it is good coding
practice. Leaving off the semicolon just because they can, will
theGrafixGuy
Good coding practice is for classroom, real world you want lean with as
little waste as possible. I look at it like a space mission to the
moon and
every byte is weight - the less weight I have for the structure of the
rocket (framework for the site)and still have a solid site, the m
Sure Hugh
Any good programmer would never leave it off because it is good coding
practice. Leaving off the semicolon just because they can, will
eventually come and kick them in the butt. And if it doesn't MSIE
surely would. Remember the quotes in the old days.
Leo
On Thursday, April 15, 2004
theGrafixGuy wrote:
I always use instead of , instead of , red or #F00
I always thought , and "red" were bad coding practice - b / i
are deprecated and colours should be absolutely defined.. ?
Sure you save a few bytes, but connections are only getting faster, and
correct display is more
pretty stuff
with new indents for every sub piece and a reduced indent for the way out.
It all works in the end I guess.
Brian
-Original Message-
From: Hugh Todd [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2004 11:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] Constructive Criticism
Jackie Reid said:
>http://www.mockorange.com.au/mocksites/test/jugernaut/juganaut.html
>http://www.mockorange.com.au/mocksites/test/jugernaut/index.html
I love the site - very nicely done. I ran it through Opera 5/6/7, Moz Firebird,
Netscape 6/7 and IE6 and it looks fine in all of them - some sli
theGrafixGuy said,
You do not need the “;” after the last attribute in each style
I know this is technically true (browsers will accept it) but I
understood that good coding practice is to put the semicolon even after
the last attribute. Anyone else know anything about this?
-Hugh Todd
***
Yep - one of the tools I use!
-Original Message-
From: Kay Smoljak [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2004 10:16 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [WSG] Constructive Criticism please
theGrafixGuy said:
>Once all done remove all spaces between the commas and
Kay Smoljak said:
> I have two stylesweepers set up - one for "readable"
> (nice spacing etc) and one for "production" (every
> extra space removed). One click (ok, maybe two)
> and your css is transformed...
Jackie Reid said:
> Good grief.. thats amazing!!! Thanks a bundle Kay.
No worries. It'
: Wednesday, April 14, 2004
10:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] Constructive
Criticism please
GraphixGuydo you mean this...?
p {text-align:justify;line-height:130%;font-size:75%;margin:
0 0 10px 0;}
div#quote {background-color: #e2dfd5; width: 181px;display
ssage -
From: "Kay Smoljak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 3:16 PM
Subject: RE: [WSG] Constructive Criticism please
> theGrafixGuy said:
> >Once all done remove all spaces between the commas and the semi-colons
and
&g
: Thursday, April 15, 2004 1:57
PM
Subject: RE: [WSG] Constructive Criticism
please
Looks good overall
thought you have a at least one spelling error - ability to life the 1kg
load should be lift I would think.
Anyway as for your
CSS, you have a lot of fat that can be
theGrafixGuy said:
>Once all done remove all spaces between the commas and the semi-colons and
>remove the rest of the returns and have one LONG line - all of these
>together will trim A LOT off the size of the stylesheet - mine by itself in
>a editing state with comments is over 18k but the versio
Title: Message
Jackie,
i'm
using ie6 on winxp, and one thing i noticed was that you need to include border
sizes on your navigation links (all except the top section), to avoid it all
jumping around on hover. i *hate* when that happens ;)
because you're adding borders in when i hover, you s
Looks good overall thought you have a at
least one spelling error - ability to life the 1kg load – should be
lift I would think.
Anyway as for your CSS, you have a lot of
fat that can be trimmed from that as well (no need to repeat the font families
if ya put them in the body style)
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