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 Posted by Jim S on 09/25/07 20:50 
On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 16:31:27 -0400, Jonathan N. Little wrote: 
 
> Jim S wrote: 
>  
>> Sorry I DO want the bevel, but my original set-up gave me a bevel in IE, 
>> but not in Firefox or Opera. Your list method gave me bevels in Firefox, 
>> but No buttons at all in Opera - just the text. 
>>  
>> By moving buttons, what I mean is a button that APPEARS to depress when 
>> clicked-on as my CSS buttons do in my own website. 
>  
> Well see my followup post for details but your need a bevel if your want  
> to simulate the button press. Your buttons on http://www.jimscott.co.uk/  
> have a bevel. Can make it smaller... 
>  
> Don't know what your problem is, my code works for all FF MSIE and Opera  
>   here is demo again with smaller bevels... here it is again. NOTE you  
> will need to create the IEFixes.htc file in notepad that you can copy  
> from my other post in order for MSIE support. 
>  
> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" 
>              "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> 
> <html> 
> <head> 
>    <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> 
>    <meta http-equiv="content-language" content="en-us"> 
>    <title>template</title> 
>  
>    <style type="text/css"> 
>  
>      ul.buttonbar { 
>        font: .8em/1.4 sans-serif; list-style: none; width: 8em; 
>      } 
>      ul.buttonbar li { 
>        margin: 1px;  height: 3em; background-color: #ccc; 
>        border: 2px outset #ccc; 
>      } 
>      ul.buttonbar a { 
>        display: block; text-align: center; text-decoration: none; 
>      } 
>      /* tweak the single lines links */ 
>      ul.buttonbar a.singles { margin-top: .65em; } 
>  
> /* make it look like a pressing button, no MSIE without JS|HTA hacks */ 
>      ul.buttonbar li:active, 
>      ul.buttonbar li.active { border-style: inset; } 
>  
>      /* attach HTC file for MSIE */ 
>      ul.buttonbar li { behavior: url(IEFixes.htc);} 
>  
>    </style> 
>  
> </head> 
> <body> 
> <ul class="buttonbar"> 
>    <li><a class="singles"href="#">Home</a></li> 
>    <li><a class="singles" href="#">About Us</a></li> 
>    <li><a href="#">Current Programme</a></li> 
>    <li><a href="#">Contacts & Information</a></li> 
>    <li><a href="#">Become a Patron</a></li> 
>    <li><a href="#">Past Performances</a></li> 
>    <li><a class="singles" href="#">About our Area</a></li> 
> </ul> 
>  
> </body> 
> </html> 
 
You got me going again. 
Yes, that works in FF and Opera browsers. 
Where exactly do I put the "public component" bit? 
--  
Jim S 
        Tyneside UK 
     www.jimscott.co.uk
 
  
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