IE Problems |
IE Problems |
Dejan |
Jan 14 2009, 07:47 AM
Post
#1
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Member Group: Members Posts: 49 Joined: 14-January 09 Member No.: 7,542 |
Heya guys,
im really sorry but i dont have the problem site on the net(no hosting) hope ya willing to help me anyway, im searching for the problem for 2 days now.. The site is perfect in Opera and FF. But when i viewed it with IE my eyes teared. -Text is way too big -the menu on the left sucks(some kinda weird blue bar) -Banner is not well I tried to sort out with css validator, but i didnt understand THE CSS CODE body { font: 100% Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; background: #41383C; margin: 0; /* it's good practice to zero the margin and padding of the body element to account for differing browser defaults */ padding: 0; text-align: center; /* this centers the container in IE 5* browsers. The text is then set to the left aligned default in the #container selector */ color: #000000; } .twoColFixLtHdr #container { width: 900px; /* using 20px less than a full 800px width allows for browser chrome and avoids a horizontal scroll bar */ background: #5E7D7E; margin: 0 auto; /* the auto margins (in conjunction with a width) center the page */ border: 7px solid #5E7D7E; text-align: left; /* this overrides the text-align: center on the body element. */ margin-top: 1px; } .twoColFixLtHdr #header { background-image:url(Bannerindiaanzwart.jpg); background-position: center center; padding: 0 0px 0 0px; /* this padding matches the left alignment of the elements in the divs that appear beneath it. If an image is used in the #header instead of text, you may want to remove the padding. */ border-left: 1px groove #00FFFF; border-right: 1px groove #00FFFF; border-bottom: 2px groove #00FFFF; } .twoColFixLtHdr #header h1 { margin: 0; /* zeroing the margin of the last element in the #header div will avoid margin collapse - an unexplainable space between divs. If the div has a border around it, this is not necessary as that also avoids the margin collapse */ padding: 10px 0; /* using padding instead of margin will allow you to keep the element away from the edges of the div */ } .twoColFixLtHdr #navigatie { float: left; /* since this element is floated, a width must be given */ width: 150px; /* the actual width of this div, in standards-compliant browsers, or standards mode in Internet Explorer will include the padding and border in addition to the width */ font-family: verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; font-weight: bold; width: 180px; border-right: 1px solid #666; padding: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; background-color: #2B547E; color: #000000; } #navigatie ul { list-style: none; margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0; padding: 0; } #navigatie ul li { margin: 0; border-top: 1px groove #736F6E; } #navigatie ul li a { display: block; padding: 2px 2px 2px 4px; border-left: 20px solid #348781; border-right: 1px solid #69c; border-bottom: 1px solid #369; background-color: #3EA99F; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; width: 150px; } html>body #navigatie ul li a { width: auto; } #navigatie ul li a:hover { border-left: 10px solid #347235; border-right: 1px solid #69c; border-bottom: 1px solid #369; background-color: #69f; color: #fff; } .twoColFixLtHdr #mainContent { margin: 0 0 0 200px; /* the left margin on this div element creates the column down the left side of the page - no matter how much content the sidebar1 div contains, the column space will remain. You can remove this margin if you want the #mainContent div's text to fill the #sidebar1 space when the content in #sidebar1 ends. */ padding: 0 20px; /* remember that padding is the space inside the div box and margin is the space outside the div box */ font-size:9px; } .twoColFixLtHdr #footer { padding: 0 10px 0 20px; /* this padding matches the left alignment of the elements in the divs that appear above it. */ background: #348781; border: 1px groove #00FFFF; } .twoColFixLtHdr #footer p { margin: 0; /* zeroing the margins of the first element in the footer will avoid the possibility of margin collapse - a space between divs */ padding: 3px 0; /* padding on this element will create space, just as the the margin would have, without the margin collapse issue */ } .fltrt { /* this class can be used to float an element right in your page. The floated element must precede the element it should be next to on the page. */ float: right; margin-left: 8px; } .fltlft { /* this class can be used to float an element left in your page */ float: left; margin-right: 8px; } .clearfloat { /* this class should be placed on a div or break element and should be the final element before the close of a container that should fully contain a float */ clear:both; height:0; font-size: 1px; line-height: 0px; } .style2 { color: #000000; font-weight: bold; } .style3 {color: #000000} please help Ciao Deejan This post has been edited by Darin McGrew: Feb 28 2009, 09:55 PM |
Dejan |
Mar 17 2009, 12:45 PM
Post
#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 49 Joined: 14-January 09 Member No.: 7,542 |
heya sorry guys for my long time being offline,
had a lot on my mind.. im back for now. I also beginning a new design, the old one pretty sucked i think. Darin, On your post above, an example: http://smitska.woelmuis.nl/layout2.html If u open it with IE, the main container in the middle goes almost from top to bottom(which is quite correct), if u open it with opera.. Its correct on top, but on the bottom there is a huge gap. So thats the problem, i dont know what sizes to give the container. U say let it adapt the size of the concent, but every page has a different content so that would be quite ugly that the size changes every page Greetz Dejan |
pandy |
Mar 17 2009, 11:57 PM
Post
#3
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,753 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
Fix the errors to start with.
http://www.htmlhelp.com/cgi-bin/validate.c...s&input=yes Fixing the only CSS error will shed some light. http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/validat...g=1&lang=en You can't both declare new properties and use inherit at the same time. Remove inherit and you'll see what's going on. Now you should see the underlined non-breaking spaces all the way down. The content of #header is higher than #header so it overflows. It's higher than "container too. Again it overflows. This is what happens in good browsers, not only Opera. IE instead expands the height of the box to fit its content. This is why it's not a good idea to define a fixed height for text. It must go somewhere and you can never know the actual height of a piece of text since that depends not only on the amount of text but also on the user's preferences. |
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