> I haven't looked into CSS much. What browsers support them? What happens > with browsers that don't support them? If CSS's are the way to go, then > feel free to set it up. :)
Well, according to what I've read, CSS support in "main-stream" browsers is best in Opera (3.50+), followed by MSIE (3+, 4 is better) and Netscape (4+, but Netscape's support is rather sucky). Best support is in Emacs-w3 and in the W3C development browsers. CSS essentially removes the "looks" from the HTML documents, and specifies all the colours, fonts, margins, paddings and other magic in a separate document (which has the nice property of being just that, separate, so that it can be linked from all pages, and changed easily for all pages). Browsers that do not support CSS just works as usual (not seeing the advanced features, of course). I've just started learning CSS myself, and I don't think that the browsers are capable enough for entirely switching to it anytime soon. Give it a year or so. But it's a neat idea :-) [Double language links on SPI pages] > I don't see this. Was it already fixed? It only occures on news that have other translations, and since the English versions haven't been re-made after I added the Swedish translation, it doesn't show there. Have a look at the Swedish version of any of the 1999 news items, and you'll see what I mean. -- \\// Peter - http://www.softwolves.pp.se/ When answering to mailing list or news posting, please do not Cc me personally. Thanks.