On 10 Jun 2009, at 13:47, MilesTogoe wrote:
@justingood point - I discovered there wasn't a doc type - so I put in a doc type with "transitional" - this seemed to improve things but not really get rid of thinner white space. Which brings up the point, if using with css, jquery, etc - what should doc type be ? transitional vs strict ? what about with css3 display tables ?
I would go with XHTML transitional or strict or HTML 4 strict. That isn't a CSS/jquery issue though. Your spaces shouldn't be happening. There is something wrong with the way you have it implemented. Can you give us a URL so we can see it? I would bet the farm that it is a simple fix.
@brandon I think that is an issue but goes against neat indented coding: <div id="whatever"> <p>stuff</p> <!-- spaces instead of tabs --> </div>
You shouldn't have white space however you have your code. There is a white space bug in IE, but that shouldn't case space between divs.
so I'm thinking of experimenting with the new css display tables - more like the control of the old tables and gets away from messy floats, clears. And yeah I don't care if IE refuses to support the css standard - we'll just tell our customers they have to use Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Konqueror, Arora, Epiphany, or Opera - "anything but Microsoft" - besides they'll probably get a better, faster, safer browser. so anyone been using the new css display tables ? experiences ?
Eeeek. Please, no. Before you toss the baby out with the bath water, give us an example of what you're trying to do.
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
_______________________________________________ UPHPU mailing list [email protected] http://uphpu.org/mailman/listinfo/uphpu IRC: #uphpu on irc.freenode.net
