importing the CSS in the body is generally not an approved method and it makes debugging and the source code a long and messy funky thing to look at.
Is there a reason why you wouldn't just use a stylesheet in the head?
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com | Marketing and Creative Services
You don't need to use style in your include files.
Simply have the relevant HTML in your files IE
<a href="link.htm" class="style">my link</a>
then in a stylesheet just have the styling in 'path/my.css'
.style {color: black;}
Then the page that you have all this on your display page...
Sounds like you need to use a TABLE. For tabular data the table is still the expected and standards compliant way to laying out information.
Doing this with DIVS, SPANS etc. will be a nightmare and you will either have to fall back to fixed widths and heights OR JS to get a look of uniformity...
Yes,
You can go to edit and enter the code you want to find and replace. then just select all the files in the directory and from the dropdown choose, "selected files".
You should have just made a template file and gone from there.
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com | Marketing and Creative...
strongman, you are right. I assumed that we were talking about a tablet not a reader.
Since that is the case, I wouldn't concern myself with websites looking good or not on a reader. It's not their intended purpose.
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com | Marketing and Creative Services
All mobile browsers work perfectly fine with JS and disabling it is almost unheard of.
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com | Marketing and Creative Services
your line break, and IMG tags are incorrect
<br /> <img ... />
it is also a self closing tag and does NOT have an opening tag.
All tags must be closed.
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com | Marketing and Creative Services
AFAIK the Kindle Browser is standards compliant. You need to be specific as to what you define as NOT OK.
Your question too vague to answer as MODAL popups look and work fine on tablet or larger displays but on smaller and mobile phones they can be a real PITA.
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com...
No, that's why my suggestion was for JQUERY, and I stated that. Fixed dimensions is just the easiest to manage IMO. That was a statement in generality.
I feel that you feel offended by something I might have said earlier. If that's the case none was suggested.
Darryn Cooke
www.darryncooke.com...
http://www.hardcode.nl/archives_139/article_515-vertical-align-plugin.htm
JQUERY for center vertical align.
Fixed height and padding is the simplest solution to manage, and it's usually the one I employ.
@ChrisHirst - my response was to the OP and JQUERY looked like the best (and only)...
Chris I will respectfully disagree. When it comes to vertical alignment and centering using CSS there are many ways and methods to achieve it, all with caveats. There are methods using line heights, padding, negative margins, computational equations with fixed height containers, setting your...
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