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 Posted by Michael Laplante on 07/04/12 11:46 
"Jonathan N. Little" <lws4art@centralva.net> wrote in message  
news:4456d211$0$3708$cb0e7fc6@news.centralva.net... 
> Michael Laplante wrote: 
 
> so with pixels position placed blocks within the document the text may or  
> MAY NOT fit properly when printed. 
 
I agree. However, in theory, a print stylesheet would "redesign" the page  
for print. I've been experimenting with print stylesheets. Essentially I  
turn off all the graphic elements, and re-size the center container and the  
text containers. However, I run into one of two issues: 
 
In Gecko browser, DIV elements don't print across pages. But, if I get rid  
of the DIV, I then encounter the margin problem in IE. 
I haven't figured out a way around this and haven't come across any  
references that offer a fool proof way around it either. 
 
> You can either design with more flexible layout where placement is  
> proportional to the text or if you must have precision printing use PDF. 
 
Agree that PDF seems to be the only sure way right now. 
 
> In Gecko browsers, (Firefox, SeaMonkey, Netscape, et al.) If you hit CTRL  
> + just twice the menu text grows larger than the block element LI so the  
> bottom of the text is chop off. I'd call that broken. The height is  
> constrained with absolute values rather than proportional to the text. 
 
Aah, there's something I didn't know. I can set up containers that will  
re-size and maintain their relative vertical spacing with changing text  
size. How do I do this? (URL to a tutorial?) 
 
> BTW your markup a hodge-podge of deprecated markup and CSS. 
 
No argument. Thass why I'm here. . . :) 
 
M
 
  
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