
"David A. Desrosiers" writes:
With the proper use of CSS selectors, hidden and visible properties, and other attributes and classes, you can make this very small and tight.
I don't care how it works internally; how does it look to the users?
It should always degrade properly to continue to work with the lesser capabilities of older browsers or browsers that don't support the full rich CSS styles. This includes PDAs, cellphones, WAP devices, screen scrapers, syndicated feeds, text-based browsers, text-to-speech devices, and so on.
So this won't work for many users, in fact the group of users that would most likely want to turn off line numbers on poetry. I think that important to remember.
Why should you want to "change" the CSS? Maybe I'm missing your goals here. Can you try to explain this a bit further, perhaps by providing some examples you've done that solve/show these problems?
Again, I'm not looking at it internally. So far, all I've seen with CSS forces you to change the HTML code to change things. How does this look to the end user? -- ___________________________________________________________ Sign-up for Ads Free at Mail.com http://promo.mail.com/adsfreejump.htm