Christopher wrote:
> So you are basically tricking the browser with CSS ?
There's no tricks involved in CSS. It is all about achieving visual
appearance by applying style-rules in accordance with standards, and
thereby making browsers do their job in accordance with same standards
so they (hopefully) recreate the visual appearance at the user-end.
Sometimes we'll have to add workarounds for weak/old browsers that don't
support particular parts of the standards. For example: IE/win is weak
and doesn't support much of any standard, and its "support" is partly
quite buggy. Making IE/win act as if it supports standards, _can_ be
"quite tricky" at times.
> Cause I want to have a <div> nested but in different positions.
Sure, that's rarely ever a problem - although it can be problematic in
the sense that there's little or no room for mistakes.
You can offset a div from its original position in a number of ways,
each with its positive and negative effects. Combining offset-methods is
also possible, and sometimes preferable.
What will work for you depends on your exact case - complete layout and
visual appearance, which I have no clear impression of at this point so
can not suggest practical solution(s) for.
regards
Georg
--
http://www.gunlaug.no
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