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Posted by John Hosking on 04/19/07 15:58
Huub wrote:
>>
>> Secondly, your page is not well-aligned in FF, although it looks OK in
>> IE6.
>
> What do you mean with "not well-aligned"? Not every line starting at the
> same position? That was the intention.
I mean, the text is not confined to its "framing" div.
My Firefox shows http://mypage.bluewin.ch/jlh/HuubFF.jpg.
My IE shows http://mypage.bluewin.ch/jlh/HuubIE6.jpg.
Note that I have non-white default backgrounds on these browsers (pink
and yellow, respectively). If your default BG is white, you wouldn't
have noticed the misalignement.
>> And thirdly, you don't have frames just because you give the DIVs ids
>> like "Frame1". That is, you *already* have the page "implemented in
>> CSS," as you asked for in your original post.
>
>
> When I created the page using OpenOffice.org Web, I inserted frames. Now
> you tell me this is actually CSS. So OOo Web calls css frames.
Well, I don't want to swear, but Microsoft Word calls them frames, too.
It's not a bad term to describe to users of word-processing software
that this thing can have a border around it and contain... some other
thing. They're metaphorically related, and with similar effects, but not
the same things when the document gets saved as HTML.
> OK. I will spend some more time on html and css.
Learning what the HTML is "saying" will eventually save you oodles of
time. Learning the CSS will eventually save you time, space, and
(optionally :-) ) your sanity.
>
> Thank you.
You're welcome. Good luck.
--
John
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