On 19 Feb 2015 Tim Hill <t...@timil.com> wrote: > In article <44f5489854.pnyo...@pnyoung.ormail.co.uk>, Peter Young > <pnyo...@ormail.co.uk> wrote: >> I maintain the website of the local branch of the Multiple Sclerosis >> Society, at www.mssociety.org.uk/cheltenham (NB I am only responsible >> for the content, not the formatting). From time to time the site gets >> seriously malformed in RISC OS NetSurf, and then a few days later goes >> back to what is should be. Screenshots of this are at >> http://pnyoung.orpheusweb.co.uk/Chrome.jpg as it should be in Chrome on >> Windows and http://pnyoung.orpheusweb.co.uk/NetSurf.jpg as it was >> yesterday in NetSurf #2600, but it's back to how it should be this >> morning! Same NetSurf build.
> That difference is CSS. Perhaps someone knows why NetSurf doesn't always > seem to see their style sheet(s). I have seen this once or twice, even > in Windows browsers, when the CSS is missing or misnamed. Perhaps just a > slow/busy server and NetSurf is impatient? The CSS do seem to be causing the problem. Does NetSurf always fetch the components of a site in the same order? Knowledge of these things is beyond me. >> I imagine this is the fault of the site rather than of NetSurf, but I >> would value comments. (OT) If it is the fault of the site, I have a >> feeling that they may be contravening guidance about website >> accessibility for disabled people, and I would be interested in >> comments about this also. > Their cookie top bars are twee, one is superfluous and both are invisible > to NetSurf but to answer your question: The cookie bars are a pain, in that they keep returning every time I log in on Windows. Surely there should be a cookie to say that I have agreed. I'll nag the web team about this when I get a round tuit. At least as you say, I don't see them in NetSurf. [snip] Best wishes, Peter. -- Peter Young (zfc Re) and family Prestbury, Cheltenham, Glos. GL52, England http://pnyoung.orpheusweb.co.uk pnyo...@ormail.co.uk