Subject | Re: Sandman still lying about his CSS |
From | Steve Carroll |
Date | 02/09/2017 19:27 (02/09/2017 10:27) |
Message-ID | <e1dc6bd5-e1de-4e58-8d04-a92bc941310e@googlegroups.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | comp.os.linux.advocacy |
Follows | Snit |
SnitThat I've ever seen, no tool that purports to 'help you deal with different browsers' is nearly as effective as using native browsers in their OS environment but I'm open to you demonstrating DW's capabilities for this example. Last I saw, admittedly, a long time ago, DW merely let you open up various browsers. If you could talk Sandman into temporarily putting it back the way it was, you can make a video that demonstrates it.
On 2/9/17, 10:54 AM, in article sandman-d1542d339bf2d4bdfe9a7f3ea1693c35@individual.net, "Sandman" <mr@sandman.net>wrote:SandmanSnit
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In article <87de60cc-4f61-4f77-aba1-5ef58a653b2b@googlegroups.com>, Steve Carroll wrote:I actually found a fix, adding line-height: 0px to a certain element, not the body element, and now it works! :)Steve Carroll
That was one of the things I was driving at when I said you'd want to "rejiggle", it's highly doubtful you'd want to have 0px on line-height all throughout the site ;)It does look a lot better without the lines, I was sorta wondering why you had them in there.Sandman
Yeah, I noticed them later, because in my dev environment they weren't there, that's what messing with me the most, when viewed in my dev server, using the exact same code and the same browser - no white stripes! So that's how I built it and when I pushed to the production server, stripes. Gaaah! :)
Dreamweaver has tools to help you deal with different browsers so you know what it will look like. :)