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 Posted by kchayka on 05/03/06 02:06 
Jose wrote: 
>  
> And as far as I can read and see, CSS is not ready for prime time.  
 
Sure it is, you just have to know how to use it properly. Accept what 
it can and cannot do and give up the notion that the author has any 
real control over what the visitor sees. 
 
> Although the intent of separating structure and presentation is  
> laudable, CSS seems to break too easily. 
 
That usually happens when people do silly things like absolutely 
position everything on a page, thinking it will "force" the visitor to 
see things the deezyner's way. Such attempts are almost always doomed 
to failure. 
 
CSS can be misused in other ways, too, such as by newbies who haven't 
yet learned the box model or how different positioning methods really 
work. Ignorance often leads to setting conflicting properties in an 
attempt to make something "work", and broken layouts. 
 
CSS takes time to learn, and lots of practice. Don't give up on it 
without giving it a fair shake, eh? Get some well-tested templates to 
study, for a start, such as at: 
<URL:http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=CssLayouts> 
 
There are also a huge number of examples that are posted in usenet, in 
this group and at comp.infosystems.www.authoring.stylesheets. You'll 
learn loads just by lurking in these groups. And read the specs or a 
book that further helps explain what's going on. You'll get it if you 
work at it, but it *does* take work. 
 
--  
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Please reply to the group so everyone can share.
 
  
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