F
Fred Nelson
Hi:
I have a VB.NET web application that has been running just fine for several
months without any cascading style sheets. Suddenly several users have had
problems with the layout of the screen. In particular some text boxes are
getting too large and covering buttons and therefore preventing them from
being pushed.
It appears that some other application - or perhaps a plug-in - (probably an
unwanted plug-in) changes the
default browser settings and then causes problems on my site when people go
to it.
I assume that the way to solve this is to use a common cascading style sheet
everywhere in the system.
I'm having problems figuring out which font settings for labels relate to
html codes such as <h1> <h2> when I choose font sizes X-Large and the
others. The view source doesn't help as that code is actually used in the
generated html.
Does anyone know where I could find this information.
Also - is there a default style sheet somewhere that will cause screen to
display as it does on my developemnt system.
Thanks for your help!
Fred
I have a VB.NET web application that has been running just fine for several
months without any cascading style sheets. Suddenly several users have had
problems with the layout of the screen. In particular some text boxes are
getting too large and covering buttons and therefore preventing them from
being pushed.
It appears that some other application - or perhaps a plug-in - (probably an
unwanted plug-in) changes the
default browser settings and then causes problems on my site when people go
to it.
I assume that the way to solve this is to use a common cascading style sheet
everywhere in the system.
I'm having problems figuring out which font settings for labels relate to
html codes such as <h1> <h2> when I choose font sizes X-Large and the
others. The view source doesn't help as that code is actually used in the
generated html.
Does anyone know where I could find this information.
Also - is there a default style sheet somewhere that will cause screen to
display as it does on my developemnt system.
Thanks for your help!
Fred