CSS - Design Messed Up In Mozilla, Firefox And Netscape! (was "help! Please?")
Oh, to say I'm gutted is under-rated, I thought I had mastered what is CSS design for one of my sites, that was until I decided to test it at work on FireFox, Netscape and Mozilla. For a start the content isn't in the center of the page, and some of the div's seem to be constrained into the right hand column, not sure why.
The page looks perfect in IE. But messed up in the others, I am kicking myself I have left it so late to check. If any very nice person/people can help me sort this out I would be sooo happy, especially if I can understand why it is so messed up. I'm not really that technical, I'm a graphic designer so if you can help, keep it fairly simple please. The link is: http://www.gladiatorszone.co.uk/main_new1.shtml I think it might be a position element wrong or a float? Similar TutorialsHi, I'm trying to build a nav using css, I need to style each <li> within the nav becuase they need to be different lengths on the page. I have had it working fine on IE but I can'#t get it working for for any other browser. Does soneone know how I can style each of my list items accordingly, notice the different block lengths for each one which is very important. I have tried both id="Style" and class="Style" and no joy, I have also tried #nav ul li li li li li a:hover in my style without id or class in my HTML Here is my Html PHP Code: <DIV id="nav"> <ul> <li id="1"><a href="Home">Home</a></li> <li id="2"><a href="About-us">About us</a></li> <li id="3"><a href="FlexNews">FlexNews</A></li> <li id="4"><a href="Careers">Careers</A></li> <li id="5"><a href="Contact">Contact</A></li> </ul> </div> Pretty straight forward, now my css PHP Code: #nav { width:1005px; vertical-align: middle; text-align: left; } #nav ul { list-style: none; padding: 0; margin: 0; } #nav li { float: left; text-align: left; } #1 a{ line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 215px; display: block; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #1 a:hover { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 215px; display: block; color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; background-color: #33A02C; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #2 a{ line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 211px; display: block; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #2 a:hover { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 211px; display: block; color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; background-color: #33A02C; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #3 a { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 211px; display: block; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #3 a:hover { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 211px; display: block; color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; background-color: #33A02C; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #4 a { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 184px; display: block; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #4 a:hover { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 184px; display: block; color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; background-color: #33A02C; text-indent: 17px; border-right-width: 2px; border-right-style: solid; border-right-color: #FFFFFF; } #5 a { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 183px; display: block; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; text-indent: 17px; } #5 a:hover { line-height: 20px; float: left; width: 183px; display: block; color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: none; text-align: left; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; background-color: #33A02C; text-indent: 17px; } Here is an exmple link http://dev.121design.co.uk/flextrade2/ Works fine in IE but not in Firefox, heres hopling someone can help. Thanks in Advance, tried so many different methods and none seem to work. Cheers, Stuart Hi there, I'm back again I'm afriad with another minor problem with my new site design. Have a look at the test version of my website he http://www.eveythingfree.buildtolearn.net/classifieds/ If you are looking at it in Internet Explorer it should look fine, but if you try it in Mozilla Firefox or Netscape it looks badly messed up. The problem is with the 2 boxes near the top of the page, the "latest forum posts" one and the "search box". The whole page (from bellow the navbar) is laid out by the php script that generates most of the content of the site. Thus I am limited in what I can adjust but I can use .css to layout these two boxes. Here is the css that controls the forum and search boxes: Code: .forums { font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 10px; color: #666666; text-decoration: none; border: 1px solid #666666; padding: 5px 10px 10px; background-color: #F9F9F9; position: relative; width: 453px; height: 100px; left: 10px; top: 10px; vertical-align: top; margin-bottom: 10px; float: left; } .searchbox { font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 10px; color: #666666; text-decoration: none; border: 1px solid #666666; background-color: #F9F9F9; width: 230px; height: 100px; left: 20px; vertical-align: top; margin-bottom: 10px; padding-top: 15px; top: 10px; position: relative; } .listings { position: relative; top: 10px; } Now I'm pretty sure that the problem lies with the "float" property in .forums. I seem to recall Mozilla and Netscape don't recognise this in the same way IE does. Is there a way of making the site look the same in other browsers as it does in IE? Without the "float" property I have failed to get it to look right, but there must be some way around this problem. I'd really appreciate any help, as this one thing has been holding me back for ages! Thanks, Robert Okay here's the problem, I have used px instead of % and I have a feeling it's ruined my whole site because of the fact that users can set their font size custom which TOTALLY messes up margins and things that I have set so precisely. Here is my site: www.msredimp.000webhost.info At small it works perfectly and the forms stay all normal, but when it's increased or decreased it totally ruins it. Is there a way to force the settings in Mozilla to normal size? Or any other way? Thank you, and sorry for being such a newbie. Hi, I'm still new to CSS and have been learning for the past couple of days now. I'm having trouble getting a two-column layout working correctly. Using the faux method, I have a background set so the right-column has a different background color. This works fine. But I'm having trouble placing the elements inside of the container to work correctly. When the left-column has more content than the right, instead of the container (and thus the background) moving to fit it, the column just extends down by itself. However if the right column has more content than the left, it works correctly. I think it might be because of the float: left, but I'm still new and not exactly sure what the problem is. The URL to view this is http://serve5.net/extend/ - the CSS is right in the source for you to look at. Could someone point me in the right direction as far as getting the left-column to extend down correctly? It seems to work fine in Internet Explorer - but I use Mozilla Firefox and it's having this issue. However, in Mozilla, the left-column's background extends to the border fine, but in IE, it overlaps it. What can I do to fix this also? Thanks. In mozilla firefox (and possibly other browsers, iv only tested in firefox and IE) the margins of my class="subtitle" div, "escape" my class="content" div. Basically the 10px margin of subtitle acts outside the content div, when it is inside it. My site is http://rapwars.ace-spades.com and the css is http://rapwars.ace-spades.com/include/stylesheets/rapwars_main.css If you visit the site you will see that the white area with the "subtitle" text box in, is pushed about 10px down from the flash navigation. Thank you for any help (I originally posted this at the end of another of my topics but I don't think it was seen). I have just noticed this problem in firefox (may happen in other browsers) but I couldnt make it happen in IE6. After the first load of the page or after a "hard refresh" (ctrl + F5) the middle and right column do not "shift up" and leave a gap. (see attached picture). But if I refresh (just F5) firefox shifts them up to display the page as it should be seen. Example Picture The site itself. Any ideas? I'm taking over a departmental web page that has a whole bunch of Code: <body topmargin="0" bottommargin="0" leftmargin="0" rightmargin="0"> in the web pages. Does anyone know how to put this in a stylesheet so that I don't have to put this code in every <body> tag when I create a new page? I've searched all over and can't find a reasonable resolution. Thanks Hi, I'm using XHTML & CSS (strict dtd) and using one large table to format my pages. Within the table I have different alignments and any other sort of thing that you would find in a table. W3.org says my XHTML --AND-- CSS are VALID, so why does the main table render off to the left of the page in Netscape?? Everything within the table is great, but the table itself is not centered. I'm using CSS in the following manner to try to center it currently Code: <!-- All the doctype stuff and head tags go here...--> <body style="text-align:center"> <!-- Rest of the document --> It works greate in IE (but what doesen't), so is this the wrong attribute to use to center the documents content in Netscape. As you may know "<center>" is not defined in the XHTML strict dtd so that options out. Thanks for any help or suggestions, Kalan on a page i have a <input type="file"> tag for upload purposes. I want that thing have the following look:
no borders
'Courier New' font
a height of 16 pixels
a font-size of 14 pixels
a special background color
and a paddin of 0 pixels
I have made the apropriate CSS definitions: Code: <style type="text/css"> input { height: 16px; border-width: 0px; background: #e0e0e0; padding: 0px; font-size: 14px; font-family: Courier New; } </style> The problem is that Mozilla does not fully implement these definitions. Mozilla makes the height and the background of the textfield-part the way i specified. The rest is left the way it is. I would appreciate any help you could give me. Okay, I'm sort of learning as I go here. I had thought I would use a locker as the background, but then I decided to try learning how to do a liquid design (and positioning, oooo) and that kind of screwed me up because now I don't know how to do the locker sides (gap between door and frame like at top). In a fixed width, I'd put a bg graphic that spanned #container, but in a flexible width design...I'm confused. Do I have to do some stretchy hijinks (layered divs w/bg images) like I did w/the top? That would be very confusing, if so... This is the first of many questions to come, I'm sure. The horribly pedestrian design is at http://www.describe.org/projects/describe/ I have designed one page. I am getting correct behavior in IE but there is some problem with Mozilla. Here is the code sample: <DIV class=ColumnHeader><SPAN class=noSort style="WIDTH: 6%; TEXT-ALIGN: center"><input type=checkbox id=chkSelAllAvail value="" name=chkSelAllAvail></SPAN> <SPAN style="WIDTH: 20%">Year</SPAN> <SPAN style="WIDTH:36%">Type of Report</SPAN> <SPAN style="WIDTH:24%">End Date</SPAN></DIV> I have attached both screen shots of IE and Mozilla. Can anyone help me ?? Hi there, I've been reading up on creating CSS designs with "vertical rythym" but the tutorials i have read seem to conflict in their message and so im struggling to understand how to do it. Tutorial One The tutorial above, uses a line-height of 18 px no matter what size of text is used. In the tutorial, a heading has had its font-size property set to 20 px but only has an 18 px line height. Tutorial two Meanwhile, the tutorial above uses different line-height settings according to the size of the text being used. In the tutorial, a heading has had its font-size set to 24px and so the line-height has been set to 36px to accomodate this fact. I'd just like to understand vertical rythym a bit better but im struggling to understand it because tutorials around the web are giving different explanations of its use. (a) Can anyone help me understand this concept better? (b) Which tutorial is more correct in its explanation (if any)? Cheers what is the equivilant to <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"> in css? i've tried PHP Code: table { border-spacing: 0px; padding: 0px; border-colapse: colapse; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; } td { border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; padding: 2px; } That makes the width 2px wide though. I want it to only be one. And the padding seems to be messed up as well. Just testing this in different browsers and noticed that the image is shown in the background but does not go to the background-position that is specified. This works for IE. Does anyone know if there is a different way of doing this? <STYLE type="text/css"> BODY { background-image:url(awesome.gif); background-repeat:no-repeat; background-position:50 220; background-attachment:fixed } </STYLE> Thank you for an insight into this little glitch. Hello everybody, I used the following line <td width="8" background="<?php print $image; ?>" height="15" style="background-repeat: no-Repeat"></td> and it worked well for IE, but in Mozilla the image wasn't displayed properly, so I used the following line for Mozilla: <td width="8"> <img src="<?php print $image; ?>" width="8" height="15" style="background-repeat: no-Repeat"> </img> but now the "style" property does not work, and there is a back ground repeat, how can I avoid the background repeat in Mozilla? I'm using the CakePHP framework to build my site. I hope I'm not asking an impossible question and being since I'm new an all.. Anyways I finished a simple design well I thought it was simple anyway until I tried to make the content box to be a fluid width. Here's what it's supposed to look like. http://planet-rpg(dot)com/PR_style.png // yes I know I'm a new user.. Here's what I currently have. http://planet-rpg(dot)com Here's my coding. html Code: <?php echo $html->docType('xhtml-trans'); ?> <html> <head> <title>Planet RPG::. Imagine a creative universe : <?php echo $title_for_layout; ?></title> <?php echo $html->css('styles'); ?> </head> <body> <div id="top_bar"> <p>top bar</p> </div> <div id="body"> <div id="header"> <p>Header</p> </div> <div id="page-wrap"> <ul id="navigation"> <li class="first"><a href="/games/">Games</a></li> </ul> <div id="frame"> <div id="container"> <div id="main_content"> <p>Content area</p> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div id="footer"> <p>footer coding</p> </div> </body> </html> css Code: html { background: #2b435d; } html, body { margin: 0; } body, table { color: #303030; } img { border: 0; } #body { background: #d8dde8; padding: 0 0 16px; } #page-wrap { min-width: auto; margin: 10px auto; } #frame { margin: 0 auto; padding: 0px 1170px 0px 220px; margin-top: -17px; } #main_content { background-color: #fff; } #header { background: url("../img/header.png") repeat-x bottom left; height: 64px; margin-top: 36px; } #navigation { background: url("../img/navigation.png") repeat-x bottom left; height: 31px; margin-top: -20px; font-family: "Arial", sans-serif !important; font-size: 14px; color: #fff; text-shadow:-1px -1px 0 black; list-style-type: none; padding:1px 5px 1px 220px; } #navigation li { float: left; } #navigation li a { border-left: 2px solid #303030; text-shadow:-1px -1px 0 black; color: #D0D0D0; font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; text-decoration: none; display: block; height: 21px; padding: 6px 12px 1px; } #navigation li a:hover { color: white; text-shadow:-1px -1px 0 black; } #navigation li.first { padding-left: 236px; margin-left: -236px; text-shadow:-1px -1px 0 black; } #navigation li.first a { background: url("../img/cursor.png")bottom center no-repeat; height:24px; color: #6193c7; border: 0; text-shadow:-1px -1px 0 black; } #logo { width: 166px; height: 50px; margin-top: -32px; margin-left: 20px; position: absolute; z-index: 2; } #footer { background: #607080 url("../img/footer.png") repeat-x; height: 60px; padding: 30px 0; clear: both; } #top_bar { background: url("../img/top_bar.png") repeat-x bottom left; height: 36px; font-family: "Arial", sans-serif !important; font-size: 12px !important; font-weight: normal !important; height: 36px; position: fixed; top: 0; left: 0; right: 0; z-index: 5; } I haven't used CSS/html in awhile but if anyone can help me either "fix" the content box so it appears like mockup which would be centered on my screen as my resolution is 2560X1600(30") and just repeat the <div's> when needed. Hope someone can help me with my question. http://stuweb.cms.gre.ac.uk/~as234/full/full.htm some problems: in IE the menu at the top is "block" level but i want it to be in a line? whereas in ff its ok! in ff, one of the menu image (called "main" on the left of review) doesnt appear but if u hover over it, u will see the rollover image! the background colour should be grayish however that DOESNT happen! Hi all I'm working on the following XHTML/CSS2 page: http://www.josh.ch/files/temp/strange_ff_effect It's very clean XHTML and CSS2 in my opinion, and it's displayed correctly in Firefox, Opera and Safari. However, I experience a very strange bug in Firefox2/OSX! When single clicking with the mouse somewhere on the white ground in the header area, all text on the page is selected! Try it! Click on the "Kanton Aargau" logo or anywhere in the same area, and tell me if you experience this, too. I never had an error like this, and I have no idea what could cause the problem. Any ideas? Thanks a lot Josh I am trying to centre my web contents with the following code via css: .fixcenter { width: 775px; margin: 0px auto; background: #ffffff; color: #000000; text-align: center; } It is working fine in both IE and Firefox. Problem [FireFox Only]: It center's the content in firefox, but when scroll bar appears, my contents jumps to left a little. It looks bad that , contents jumps little left after loading. Is there any solution: Hi, Im using CSS, and have included the code in a separate .css file. The whole website uses DIVs and is displaying correctly in both I.E. and Firefox. Now, I need to generate a dynamic DIV using PHP, so I did this to test it out, Code: <div style="{ background: #00cc00; width:100%; height:100%;}">abc</div> But the problem is that it displays correctly in I.E. but not in FIREFOX, all the attributes that I have specified within the style="{}" tag are NOT at all applied in FIREFOX. Only the text "abc" is displayed in firefox and the style, including the background colour is not applicable at all! Please tell me what Firefox is upto? Thanks! Your sisncerely, mbk, mbkweb. |