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#1
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#2
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I am stuck with a problem on a new site and would appreciate some help. The site is www.sallekiss.org.uk. If you look at it in FF you can see it has three columns with the two side columns being blue grey. This is done with faux columns. With IE 6 and 7 I don't get the left hand blue grey column. However if you choose one of the subsidiary pages, e.g. the "New to Fencing" page you can see that I eliminate the right hand column and the left hand column is blue grey in both FF and IE. Why don't I get the effect that I want in IE? Any other comments welcome as well as the above problem. -- Colin Walls |
#3
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The page has 48 XHMTL errors. The CSS in http://www.sallekiss.org.uk/templates/sallekiss/css/template.css> has 2 errors; the other CSS file is okay. Fix the errors and then see if that helps. |
#4
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As you can imagine using a CMS restricts me in what I can do somewhat. |
#5
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Well, it shows. The XHTML code it produces is really horrible and completely defeats the purpose of using separation of content and layout in the first place. IMHO, using tables instead of such a complicated div soup (with names such as "content60" for a column of 60% width...) for basic page layout is the lesser evil in the long run. |
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As for your problem of the left column not appearing in IE, I think it is a PNG transparency issue. Try to use GIF instead of PNG for the "rightsli" image, and it should work fine. |
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