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 Posted by Steve Pugh on 03/18/06 13:20 
coleelastic@gmail.com wrote: 
 
>http://www.testyourabilities.com/it/ 
>IT tests. HTML, XML, ASP.NET, C, C++, C#, VB.NET, SQL... 
 
Hmm, just a couple of your questions: 
 
>Which XHTML fragment is used to start a numbered list with  
>lowercase letters?  
>	<ol start="lowercase"> 	 
>	<ol begin="a"> 	 
>	<ul begin="a"> 	 
>	<ul start="lowercase"> 	 
>	<ol start="a"> 	 
>	<ul start="a"> 
 
None of the above are valid. Start always takes numerical values, even 
when the list is displaying numbers in other formats. The correct 
answer would be <ol type="a"> (And let's not forget that both type and 
start are deprecated). 
 
>Which unit can be used to specify an element size (e.g. font-size)  
>relative to the size specified for the containing element?  
>	rel 	 
>	pt 	 
>	em 	 
>	px 	 
>	auto 	 
>	% 
 
The question is very vaguely worded (and is about CSS not (X)HTML 
anyway), depending on context em and % could both be correct, and 
ignores the fact that often a size can be specified relative to a 
parent's size that has NOT been specified. 
 
Oh well, you're just a spammer so I expect you won't even see these 
comments. Keep on peddling your crap tests. 
 
	Steve 
--  
"My theories appal you, my heresies outrage you,  
 I never answer letters and you don't like my tie."  - The Doctor 
 
Steve Pugh        <steve@pugh.net>        <http://steve.pugh.net/>
 
  
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