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Posted by dorayme on 10/07/07 23:32
In article <47091f23$0$25501$ba620dc5@text.nova.planet.nl>,
"roetiman" <hahaiseengoeie@microsoft.nl> wrote:
> greetings
>
> anyone an idea what`s going wrong with the marquee on the left side?
> I`ve checked many times the images.
> see www.roetiman.nl
>
> (a dutch reggaesite under construction)
>
> thanks in advantages
If you want to use frames, the first thing to do is to top your
markup for all the html documents with a suitable document type
declaration.
But really, there are so many fundamental mistakes in this set of
pages that it is impossible to advise you to do anything other
than to carefully read through the early material at
http://www.htmldog.com/.
I draw your attention to
http://www.htmldog.com/guides/htmladvanced/declarations/
to make a couple of points:
(1) It has been argued here rather convincingly that none of
those doctypes mentioned on the above page is as reasonable to
use in practice as one not mentioned, namely
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
This last, I recommend to you. Perhaps someone else can recommend
a tute as good as htmldog but which is less focussed on the
trendy general use of xhtml. But no harm will come to your site
from using xhtml as long as you carefully follow the issues and
the language in the tutes there.
(2) On the above page, it says:
"Finally, if you're one of those wacky people who use frames, the
XHTML 1.0 Frameset document type declaration looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Frameset//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-frameset.dtd">
That's you! At least follow this advice. <g>
I concentrate on this doctype business because you are at sea on
the coding, you use series of continuous <br>s and also, on the
very same page, lots of repeated <br/>s
--
dorayme
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