Hi All:

  Definitively the best solution is to use relative URL in CSS.

   Thank you all for help.


On 17 nov, 16:07, Liam Byrne <l...@onsight.ie> wrote:
> Why are you using a root-relative URL ?
>
> If the entire site is in a folder, and then you move everything into
> another folder, everything will stay relative.
>
> Therefore, having the path as "img" (or whatever the relative path to
> that folder is) should work, no ?
>
> Liam
>
> nomen wrote:
> > Hi all:
>
> >     I have a website. All my images are in "/img" directory.
> >     Now, my client needs to put the site in a subdirectory, so, my
> > images are now in "/subdir/img".
> >     In the future, maybe we have to change the site to another
> > subdirectory.
> >     I don t want to change all my CSS anytime the client changes the
> > subdirectory.
> >     So my question is:
> >         Is there a simple way to change all CSS background-image
> > property with the next logic:
>
> >                "Change all the existing CSS background-image
> > properties in this way:
> >                    if the url starts with "/img" change to "/subdir/
> > img" else do nothing"
>
> >    Thank you for your help in advance.
>
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> > No virus found in this incoming message.
> > Checked by AVG -www.avg.com
> > Version: 8.5.425 / Virus Database: 270.14.67/2506 - Release Date: 11/16/09 
> > 07:43:00

Reply via email to