2011-06-26 2:59, Brian M. Curran wrote:
For some reason in Firefox I could still see
the border when hovering, after using your code. Therefore I did this, and
it's working now:
.textBoxRight a {color: #000;}
.textBoxRight a img {border: none;}
I have no idea why setting border to none didn't suffice (as it
The effect is that now there is no visual hint of there being a link in
the first place. So wouldn't it have been simpler to remove the link
markup <a ...> and </a> around the <img> element? Assuming that you
don't really want the link to be followed.
A colored border, with the colors of link (normally different for
visited and unvisited) is the browsers' classical default way of
indicating an image as a link. It is normally simple to remove it, but
how would you then make people see that there is a link?
Incidentally, it seems that on Firefox 4, I don't see a border around an
image that is a link, by default. It seems that authors need to set the
border explicitly if they want it.
--
Yucca, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/
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