Hello,
Is there a different CSS-syntax depending on different browsers?
If yes...
Which browser do you recommend me to check my result in if so many as possible should be able to see my page correctly?
Thanks // D_SAll browsers interpret code in slightly different ways, but the basic syntax is the same. If you want to create a web-site to be seen by a lot of users then open up IE and start coding away.
If you want to create a web-site that is accessible to ALL users then learn good XHTML and CSS. Then open up Mozilla Firefox and test in that. Then you work on the numerous fixes for buggy-as-hell IE while making sure that your web-site adhere's as closely as possible to the WCAG (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT/">http://www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT/</a><!-- m -->). (The WCAG thing is hard but it's something which I'm trying to do at the moment.)WCAG is fairly easy it just takes patience to learn and understand like many great philosophies, it not some black-art comparable to the validator.Originally posted by Robert Wellock
it just takes patienceThat's why it's hard.
Is there a different CSS-syntax depending on different browsers?
If yes...
Which browser do you recommend me to check my result in if so many as possible should be able to see my page correctly?
Thanks // D_SAll browsers interpret code in slightly different ways, but the basic syntax is the same. If you want to create a web-site to be seen by a lot of users then open up IE and start coding away.
If you want to create a web-site that is accessible to ALL users then learn good XHTML and CSS. Then open up Mozilla Firefox and test in that. Then you work on the numerous fixes for buggy-as-hell IE while making sure that your web-site adhere's as closely as possible to the WCAG (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT/">http://www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT/</a><!-- m -->). (The WCAG thing is hard but it's something which I'm trying to do at the moment.)WCAG is fairly easy it just takes patience to learn and understand like many great philosophies, it not some black-art comparable to the validator.Originally posted by Robert Wellock
it just takes patienceThat's why it's hard.