Re: HEX EEEEEE COLORS WITH IE
- From: "Murray" <forums@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 5 Mar 2007 09:33:06 -0500
The recommendations are the standard.
--
Murray
--------------
MVP FrontPage
"Thomas A. Rowe" <tarowe@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:u303y9yXHHA.2436@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
That is one way of looking at it, but that still doesn't make them
standards.
--
==============================================
Thomas A. Rowe
Microsoft MVP - FrontPage
http://www.Ecom-Data.com
==============================================
"Kevin Spencer" <unclechutney@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uQNK3uyXHHA.1216@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Well, Tom, it seems that all of the browser vendors are adopting a
"standard" of adhering to the recommendations.
;-)
--
Kevin Spencer
Microsoft MVP
Help test our new betas,
DSI PrintManager, Miradyne Component Libraries:
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"Thomas A. Rowe" <tarowe@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23EEXhvCXHHA.4624@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
There are no HTML standards, just recommendations.
--
==============================================
Thomas A. Rowe
Microsoft MVP - FrontPage
http://www.Ecom-Data.com
==============================================
"Murray" <forums@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ej0NHoBXHHA.4240@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
This does NOT benefit the user. It confuses them. This attitude is
what has gotten IE into the hole it's in now - all this making nice
stuff. There's a perfectly good set of standards out there. They
should not just ignore them willy nilly.
--
Murray
--------------
MVP FrontPage
"Thomas A. Rowe" <tarowe@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:e3r$JCAXHHA.4216@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Very simple if the browser can understand what is want or is capable
of display a page when the code is badly written this is a benefit for
the user * of the browser. Browsers that do not do this penalize users
as a way of get back at developers of the site, by making the site
look bad.
* User in this case, are folks that just want to view a web site for
the info it contains, they do not care how the site was coded, etc.
==============================================
Thomas A. Rowe
Microsoft MVP - FrontPage
http://www.Ecom-Data.com
==============================================
"P@tty Ayers" <pattyayersTAKETHISOUT@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eOIam33WHHA.4180@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I guess whether IE's laissez-faire behavior is "wrong" or not could be
debated, but I can't see how you can call it "penalizing" for the
other browsers to interpret code accurately and correctly, Thomas.
--
Patty Ayers | www.WebDevBiz.com
Free Articles on the Business of Web Development
Web Design Contract, Estimate Request Form, Estimate Work***
--
"Thomas A. Rowe" <tarowe@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uweW2n3WHHA.528@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
IE doesn't penalized users if the code is wrong, but still readable,
whereas other browsers do.
--
==============================================
Thomas A. Rowe
Microsoft MVP - FrontPage
http://www.Ecom-Data.com
==============================================
"Murray" <forums@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Opk1Tq1WHHA.2212@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Yep - as Patty notes, IE will forgive you. Other browsers will
not. IE is wrong to do this.
--
Murray
--------------
MVP FrontPage
"Scott" <Scott@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:AAD7134C-21ED-4833-BD26-1D1D0C09BFBF@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Would that make it appear on one computer and not on another - I
would assume
a missing octothorpe would be an all or nothing phenomenon?
"Murray" wrote:
All hex color values MUST be prefixed with the octothorpe "#".
Have you
done this?
#DDDDDD?
--
Murray
--------------
MVP FrontPage
"Scott" <Scott@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:F2991032-9D71-47DA-8337-121F8BE9D346@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I have a frontpage site where I've used hex colors EEEEEE and
F2F2F2 to
display different shades of gray in a table. On my computer,
and most
others, it displays fine. However, I have a client who
apparently can't
display EEEEEE or F2F2F2 (they all look white on her screen).
She can see
DDDDDD (which is almost the same), She has a ATI Radeon Xpress
with Benq
monitor. Is this common? Should I use a different color, or
is it simply
some problem with her setup. Thanks
.
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