Well really! Can't you get specific??? Russ, what on earth are you doing at 1am on Sunday morning? Are you like me and have no life either? <g>
Thanks for the rundown. That explains it very clearly and concisely. Now I know. Cheers Mike Kear -----Original Message----- From: russ weakley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sunday, 21 December 2003 12:59 AM To: Web Standards Group Subject: Re: [WSG] @Import VS Link for Style sheets? WHY? Hi Mike, The @import is generally used in two ways (the second is probably what you are referring to): ----------------------------------------------- 1. import CSS files into other CSS files ----------------------------------------------- @import can be used to import style sheets into other style sheets. Eg, you have a corporate stylesheet that is used across an entire site as well as different style sheets for each section. Each section could import the corporate style sheet into the top of their style sheets. WC3 states: Any @import rules must precede all rule sets in a style sheet. The '@import' keyword must be followed by the URI of the style sheet to include. A string is also allowed; it will be interpreted as if it had url(...) around it. http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/cascade.html#at-import ----------------------------------------------- 2. Hide from old browsers ----------------------------------------------- @import can be used to hide rules (or entires style sheets) from older browsers. Eg. You can hide rules from Netscape 4 but still allow standards compliant browsers to see these rules. These are considered hacks, but not of the evil variety : ) There are a number of ways to code the @import to hide styles from particular browsers. Here is a basic rundown (we generally use method "a"): a. Bracket and quotes ----------------------------------------------- @import url("../stylesheet.css"); Hides CSS from: * Netscape 4.x * Win IE 3 * Win IE 4 (not 4.72) * Mac IE 4.01 * Mac IE 4.5 * Konqueror 2.1.2 * Win Amaya 5.1 b. Bracket only ----------------------------------------------- @import url(../stylesheet.css); Hides CSS from: * Netscape 4.x * Win IE 3 * Win IE 4 (reads css only when located in the same directory as html) (not 4.72) c. Bracket and media (I don't like this option) ----------------------------------------------- @import url(../stylesheet.css) screen; Hides CSS from: * Netscape 4.x * Win IE 6 and below d. Quotes only ----------------------------------------------- @import "../stylesheet.css"; Hides CSS from: * Netscape 4.x * Win IE 4 and lower * Mac IE 4.01 * Konqueror 2.1.2 So, the answer to your question "does it matter" - depends on your target audience and their browsers. Each site will have different needs, users, etc. so you need to decide before you begin what level of browser support you will provide. This decision will allow you to decide if @import is required. HTH Russ > > I've noticed that some pages use a link to a style sheet, others use > @import. > > What's the difference, and does it matter to developing sites? Or Users? > > Cheers > Mike Kear > Windsor, NSW, Australia > AFP Webworks > http://afpwebworks.com > ***************************************************** The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ ***************************************************** ***************************************************** The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ *****************************************************