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Posted by dorayme on 03/06/06 08:07
In article <440b7ace$0$25071$cb0e7fc6@news.centralva.net>,
"Jonathan N. Little" <lws4art@centralva.net> wrote:
> dorayme wrote:
> <snip>
> > I could not get any 'Computed Style' option for text that was in
> > a P in the "abused" table. Why is this? Sometimes authors use
> > fonts I want to know about in "abused" table layouts... :)
> >
> The #test node could be a simple carriage return or whitespace in
> markup and therefore have no CSS properties
>
> CODE
>
> <p>{carriage return}
> {tab}<span>Some of your text...
>
>
> DOM
>
> P -+
> +-#text <- Just the CR and TAB in markup but ignored in browser
> |
> +-SPAN <- Span node with nodeValue "Some of your text..."
>
> Ώcomprende?
Well, do I? If the P is there, if the text is there, if it is
specified in the css at least to filter down to the P and the
page is reasonably valid, is there any way to use this fancy
doodle DOM inspector to track it down? Never mind tabs and
carriage returns Jonathan! Lets get down to business! You
cleverly tracked down something in the footnote ok! So why
exactly is it so hard to track down the rest?
I guess this speech shows absurd gaps in my understanding... :)
BTW, pennies might drop eventually for me if you say nothing
more, so don't feel obliged.
--
dorayme
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