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amakeler

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  1. Hi all, Subject: newbie q: How do you horizontally center (align) a div ?I have looked thru all the CSS commands, but for some reason I could not seem to find a command to horizontally center (align) a <div>. I have taken somebody's good advice to put all my content in some sort of #content div, but now I have decided to make the content a certain width, say 900px, I can't find a way to center the #content div in the center of the browser window.So surely there must such a command? Thinking...or maybe not, coz every time somebody widens the browser the whole content will have to jump.Anyway...need help.avraham
  2. I am starting to get more serious about CSS, so I read a CSS specification: http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/selector.html#q2 Belive it or not, but see 5.8.3 Class selectors, where it seems to say that you CAN specify class usage by using a dot notation, as I suggested with:<body><p.sans>This is a paragraph</p></body>(But I did not see that you can also define a class using the word "class"...)- avi
  3. I am starting to get more serious about CSS, so I read a CSS specification: http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/selector.html#q2 Belive it or not, but see 5.8.3 Class selectors, where it seems to say that you CAN specify class usage by using a dot notation, as I suggested with:<body><p.sans>This is a paragraph</p></body>But I did not see that you can define a class using teh word "class".- avi
  4. Hi all, Subject: Observation on the Class selector - from CSS Newbie studentNow I am learning CSS from W3S, I just thought that I would point out that the syntax of the Class selector is the reverse of what is intuitive to an old-time programmer, imo.In C++ and other languages, you first define the class with the "Class" directive/key-word/reserved-word (or which ever word you use to indicate a "class"), and then you use it without stating the word "Class", so you get a short-hand notation in usage.However, in CSS I note that when you define the class you do not specify the word 'class", but when you use the class you do specify the word 'class", which causes a very long-winded usage notation, and which has to be repeated every time. Below is an example from the tutorial:<head>p.sansserif {font-family: sans-serif}</head><body><p class="sansserif">This is a paragraph</p></body>I would have designed it like this: <head>p Class sans {font-family: sans-serif}</head><body><p.sans>This is a paragraph</p></body>- avi
  5. Hi all,Can anybody point me to where I can obtain good documentation on how to use XML with Word 2003.tia- avi
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