You have the option of floating them both. Add float: left; to the style
or the CSS specs. Either that or you could float: left; one and float:
right; the other.
Kenneth Downs wrote:
OK, so let's say I'm trying to make an honest go of it and resist the
urge to use TABLEs for non-tabular data.
So how do I handle this one?
I'd like to have two links on a page. They should be on the same line
together, one flush left, the other flush right. The TABLE method is
just to have two cells, but of course we don't want to do that.
What I tried was putting two divs, one after the other. The 2nd one was
relative positioned with its height at -1em. This did not work on IE 6,
and as I am using a downloaded template, as I twiddled I quickly
realized I was going to make it a lot worse before it ever got better.
So right now I am using a TABLE and wondering if anybody can teach a
database guy yet another CSS trick.
P.S., you know I wonder if there is something about programmers,
especially db guys, preferring that TABLE element, some kind of
subconscious thing...
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