HTML - Image Is Off In Firefox
Hi,
I just set up this site: salemnhconservation.org The birch tree on the left hand side under the navigation doesn't look right in Firefox but looks fine in Safari. It is way too far down the page... it should sit right under the navigation buttons. The picture of the lake is in one cell (colspan 2). The navigation is in one cell on the next row. The tree is a background image of a cell in the next row. The page content is in one cell (rowspan 2). The cell that the navigation is in is much to tall in Firefox, but I'm afraid to add a height attribute because I think the height of each navigation button varies from browser to browser. I think it would be safer to find a way to eliminate the space below the navigation. Any suggestions? Also, on an unrelated note, does this site fit in an 800x600 resolution without having to scroll horizontally? Thanks! Similar TutorialsHello, I am pretty new to the whole html world so forgive me if this is a simple problem. I have look all over for a post explaing this problem but i haven't found anything. I am making a site for a friend using Dreamweaver. I know i know, i regret not coding it from scratch but its too late now. Anyways I have a pretty good page layout going now but I have ran into a problem with loading my images. On my home page an image in a table nested inside another table will load when viewing in safari but seems to disappear in firefox. What is going on? Its a pretty simple piece of code. I place; <img src="Pictures/RDV couplepalm.jpg" width="200" height="" style="float:right; padding: 8px; margin-left:10px; margin-bottom: 10px" / inside of a paragraph in a row of a table. I have rewritten the code for this image, copied it from a working image and screwed around with the table heights (although I wasn't too sure what i was doing). What else should I try? I have attached screen shots of the site in both browsers a copy of the problem jpeg aswell as a copy of the html. Any information anyone could givee me would be REALLY appreciated! Thank you. Hi, I'm probably missing something really obvious, but I'm having a stumbling block on why for this page, you can see the image with the wreath when viewing it in Firefox, but not in Internet Explorer. I always use Firefox, but my bosses tend to use IE 6, so they were confused on why they couldn't see the image today. I also can't see the image in IE 7. I can't seem to get my image map to work in FF, it works fine in IE. Also, can I do things with the CSS hover attribute with image maps? Code: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <html> <head> <title> Pl3x.net Introduction </title> <!-- Link to external stylesheet --> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="styles.css" /> </head> <body> <div class="intro"> <img src="images/IntroAni.gif" class="intro" usemap="#navmap" /> <map id="navmap" name="planetmap" class="navmap"> <area shape="rect" href="#" class="n1" coords ="0,0,100,100" /> <area shape="rect" href="#" class="n2" /> <area shape="rect" href="#" class="n3" /> <area shape="rect" href="#" class="n4" /> </map> </div> </body> </html> Code: div.intro { margin: auto; height: 500px; width: 500px; } map.navmap { border: 0px; } img.intro { border: 0px; } First of all, thanks for taking the time to read. I've relatively no experience with web design, and so I'm trying to figure things out myself. It's worked so far with the exception of this little issue: I've downloaded an HTML template from a site and have tampered with it in Notepad for a bit. As the subject says, I'm having trouble displaying an image using IE9 while the image in questions appears properly using Firefox. I've looked up a few possible reasons so far and none of them seem to be the cause for the problem. I've checked that the dimensions for the picture in question are not in the code, which I've heard is sometimes a problem with IE while Firefox avoids that altogether. In either case, I've made sure the picture I'm replacing in the template is the same size in pixels. Second, I've also made sure the .jpg is not saved in CKNY, and that it's in fact an RGB file. Before I go on further, please let me know what other info you might need to solve this and where I can post which parts of the code you might need. Thanks again! Can someone take a look at this page: http://www.robotsandcomputers.com/robots/index.htm in both IE and Firefox and tell me why the images in the right hand side of the screen are larger in IE than in Firefox? I have been through the code and I can cannot figure it out.. Thanks Oh, and something else... On the menu at the top of the page. On that page you notice (in Firefox) that the menu spans the entire screen. But if you click on any other link on that menu, then the menu bar is centered. I removed the <p></p> tags in the menu on the first page because in IE they were adding way too much space above and below the menu links. Is there anyway to center those links (like they are on all the other pages) but still have IE display them correctly? I hope that makes sense.... Thanks.... Can someone please help? I've spent hours of time trying to fix this tiny problem. It's not online yet, so you'll have to use the text. I attached them to this thread. The CSS belongs in a folder called "css_js". The "index" should be renamed html, and the osrfd should be renamed css. In short, the bar at the bottom of the page is the issue. It works fine in IE, but not in Firefox. Hi guys Just joined and hoping someone can offer some advice on an issue. I want a black border around images which show up jsut fine in IE but some reason the border does not appear in FF. The below is an example of what i am doing. <IMG STYLE="position:absolute; TOP:110px; LEFT:610px; WIDTH:180px; HEIGHT:190px" src="Optimized-027edited.jpg" style="border-style: solid; border-color: black;"/> Does anyone have any advice on where what I can do to make the border show up in both browsers? Any help appreciated. Cheers Hello to everyone, Does anyone happen to know why firefox is messing up the color of my image? (see attached). thanks, NetGD why? thanks my problem is ie and its padding, ie has add a 4px padding at the bottom of the of the image but in safari and firefox there is no padding. here is the url so u understand what i mean http://nathanoconnor.co.uk/gilbertelectrical/site/ Hello, I'm new to the forums =) I'm currently having a problem with my navigation which involves images. Initally I used the traditional image map method using area maps and the usemap function but it only worked in the webpage itself, and when the webpage shows in an iframe the links are nonexistent. So I sliced my navigation to give the sliced images the url link instead. As usual, they work on their own but when the page is shown in an iframe, some of the links disappear (you can't even hover on them) only in Firefox, Chrome and Safari. But some of the links are also still intact. In IE and Opera they work perfectly fine. Below is the code for the page which contains the navigation and links aforementioned, which will be displayed in an iframe of another page: Code: <!-- ImageReady Slices (mainframe.jpg) --> <table id="Table_01" width="971" height="565" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> <tr> <td rowspan="4"> <img src="images/mainframe_01.gif" width="200" height="531" alt=""" style="z-index:-3;"></td> <td> <a href="defence.html" target="_parent" onmouseover="window.status='STET Defence'; return true;" onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"> <img src="images/mainframe_02.gif" width="332" height="163" border="0" alt="" style="z-index:1;"></a></td> <td rowspan="4"> <img src="images/mainframe_03.gif" width="438" height="531" alt=""></td> <td> <img src="images/spacer.gif" width="1" height="163" alt=""></td> </tr> <tr> <td> <a href="maritime.html" target="_parent" onmouseover="window.status='STET Maritime'; return true;" onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"> <img src="images/mainframe_04.gif" width="332" height="134" border="0" alt="" style="z-index:1;"></a></td> <td> <img src="images/spacer.gif" width="1" height="134" alt=""></td> </tr> <tr> <td> <a href="homelandsec.html" target="_parent" onmouseover="window.status='STET Homeland Security'; return true;" onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"> <img src="images/mainframe_05.gif" width="332" height="138" border="0" alt="" style="z-index:1;"></a></td> <td> <img src="images/spacer.gif" width="1" height="138" alt=""></td> </tr> <tr> <td rowspan="2"> <a href="centre.html" target="_parent" onmouseover="window.status='STET Centre'; return true;" onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"> <img src="images/mainframe_06.gif" width="332" height="130" border="0" alt="" style="z-index:1;"></a></td> <td> <img src="images/spacer.gif" width="1" height="96" alt=""></td> </tr> <tr> <td> <a href="https://mail.stet.com.sg/owa/auth/logon.aspx?url=https://mail.stet.com.sg/owa&reason=0" target="_parent" onmouseover="window.status='Login to Intranet'; return true;" onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"> <img src="images/mainframe_07.gif" width="200" height="34" border="0" alt="" style="z-index:1;"></a></td> <td> <a href="sitemap.php" target="mainframe" onmouseover="window.status='Lost?'; return true;" onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"> <img src="images/mainframe_08.gif" width="438" height="34" border="0" alt=""></a></td> <td> <img src="images/spacer.gif" width="1" height="34" alt=""></td> </tr> </table> <!-- End ImageReady Slices --> <div id="pict" style="position:absolute;top:200px;left:10px;z-index:0;"> <iframe name="news" src="news.php" FRAMEBORDER=no name="frame" allowTransparency scrolling=auto style="filter:chroma (color=#FFFFFF)" width="185" height="90"></iframe> </div> There is another iframe in this page which I wonder might be causing the problem. However even when I removed it the problem remains. Any ideas how to fix it? Would really appreciate the help, thanks! Some really weird situation: Please look at this page here. Scroll down to the footer. You will see a GIF image right? In alle browsers BUT firefox, this displays fine.. in firefox its cancelled out for some vague reason. Thats weird right, but the weirdest thing is that only in firefox (when looked to at firebug) there is something i only can describe as a "phantom class" Its only visible in firefox, and it has a weird name " ednfltlufdujmlipsfpd" ... so, what the pancakes is going on? Hi there, Using fireFox I get the desired result, but when using IE I get the image on the *left* side?! this is my code (the header is a jsp page that has an image and user's info name and last logged in)) <td width="90%" valign="top" align="right"> <tiles:insert attribute='header'/> </td> as you can see the image (header) is align to the right, but IE pushes it to the left (I wrote center - and it still keeps on pushing it to the left) any idea why?? Hi all -- I'm having an interesting problem. I'm designing a web page that has a navigation banner (home - programs - schedule of events - contact us - downloads) that is made up of a .png for each page (i.e. home.png, programs.png, etc). My page is 1000px wide and all of the navigation banner's images add up to 1000px wide. I'm using JavaScript to create an onMouseOver and onMouseOut effect on each of the images. The problem that I'm having occurs when I tried to add a link (either by <A HREF= or using an image map). Whenever I add a link to the image, a small (3px) area of white space shows up to the right of the image. This shifts all of my other images 3px to the right (and 3 more for each link I add to subsequent images) thus making the total width of the navigation banner over 1000px and the last image gets shoved to a new line. I can find no way to get rid of this white space other than to remove the link from the image. There is no property on the page that adds any sort of padding, margins, or borders to images or links, so I can see no property that has to be changed. Help! How do I get rid of this white space but still keep the link on the image?? [I posted this question on the Adobe forum to no avail, below is a screencap I took of the issue I'm having] Thanks in advance! //kl PS - I am using both IE8 and Chrome to view this webpage. I've set all the margins/padding/borders to 0px. Here is my CSS and the part of the code that pertains to the navigation banner. CSS: Code: <style type="text/css"> <!-- body { font: 100% Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; background: #666666; margin: 0; /* it's good practice to zero the margin and padding of the body element to account for differing browser defaults */ padding: 0; text-align: center; /* this centers the container in IE 5* browsers. The text is then set to the left aligned default in the #container selector */ color: #000000; background-image: url(images/blue.bg.png); background-repeat: repeat; background-color: #009; } .oneColFixCtr #container { width: 1000px; /* using 20px less than a full 800px width allows for browser chrome and avoids a horizontal scroll bar */ background: #FFFFFF; margin: 0 auto; /* the auto margins (in conjunction with a width) center the page */ border: 0px solid #000000; text-align: left; /* this overrides the text-align: center on the body element. */ } .oneColFixCtr #mainContent { padding: 0 20px; /* remember that padding is the space inside the div box and margin is the space outside the div box */ } body, td, th { color: #333; } #main_banner2 { margin: 0px; padding: 0px; height: auto; width: 1000px; } --> </style> </head> Nav Banner: NOTE:: below HAS to be all one paragraph because if i insert a carriage return in between images, it also adds the white space... Code: <body class="oneColFixCtr"> <!-- MAIN NAVIGATION BANNER --> <!--HOME--><img src="images/nav/home.png" alt="home" name="home" width="82" height="30" border="0" onMouseOver="document.images.home.src='images/nav/home_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.home.src='images/nav/home.png'"/><!--PROGRAMS--><img src="images/nav/programs.png" width="111" height="30" border="0" name="programs" onMouseOver="document.images.programs.src='images/nav/programs_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.programs.src='images/nav/programs.png'"/><!--SCHEDULE OF EVENTS--><img src="images/nav/scheduleofevents.png" width="189" height="30" border="0" name="scheduleofevents" onMouseOver="document.images.scheduleofevents.src='images/nav/scheduleofevents_ over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.scheduleofevents.src='images/nav/scheduleofevents.png'"/><!-- CONTACT US--><img src="images/nav/contactus.png" width="119" height="30" border="0" name="contactus" onMouseOver="document.images.contactus.src='images/nav/contactus_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.contactus.src='images/nav/contactus.png'"/><!--DOWNLOADS--><i mg src="images/nav/downloads.png" width="267" height="30" border="0" name="downloads" onMouseOver="document.images.downloads.src='images/nav/downloads_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.downloads.src='images/nav/downloads.png'"/><!--FACEBOOK--><im g src="images/nav/facebook.png" width="90" height="30" border="0" name="facebook" onMouseOver="document.images.facebook.src='images/nav/facebook_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.facebook.src='images/nav/facebook.png'"/><!--TWITTER--><img src="images/nav/twitter.png" width="67" height="30" border="0" name="twitter" onMouseOver="document.images.twitter.src='images/nav/twitter_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.twitter.src='images/nav/twitter.png'"/><!--BLOGGER--><img src="images/nav/blogger.png" width="75" height="30" border="0" name="blogger" onMouseOver="document.images.blogger.src='images/nav/blogger_over.png'" onMouseOut ="document.images.blogger.src='images/nav/blogger.png'"/><img src="images/home_banner.png" alt="home_border" width="1000" height="7" /><br /> So in January 2006 I posted a question about "making two buttons in one" 3 years and 5 months later i am happy to announce that I have found a solution. Ok, so no I have not spent the last three years looking, but the need for one came around again yesterday so I revisited the project. All I needed was "simple" image toggle. Image 'A' click it once it changes to image 'B' click it again it changes back to image 'A' All the "image toggle" codes I could find were extremely complex. I thought I had finally found one, it wasn't perfect, but it was the smallest and most basic thing I could find. HTML Code: <html> <head> <style type="text/css"> .on {background-image:url(playlist_btn.png); background-repeat:no-repeat;} .off {background-image:url(playlist_btn_x.png); background-repeat:no-repeat;} </style> <script language="javascript"> function togglestyle(el){if(el.className == "on") {el.className="off";} else {el.className="on";}} </script> </head> <body> <div id="onoff" class="playlist_btn"><img src="blank.gif" width="50 height="50" onclick="togglestyle(onoff)"></div> </body> </html> I tested it, it worked, so I considered problem solved. I placed it in my page and nothing. Turns out it wont work with a doc type - so it's useless. Other problems, I'm not big on using "blank gif's" unless I have to, if you want multiple image toggles you need a new JS function for each one, and two lines of css as well. And, though I rarely use image rollovers anymore, it would certainly not be possible in this method. So it was back to the drawing board. Well, I had actually already found the solution a few minuets prior to finding out that the above code is so good. I had coded a button that on rollover shows a tooltip, when you click the button, the text in the tool tip, changes, chick again and it reverts. All done with a simple showHide javascript function, that i am finfing out has many uses. here is the awesome code: Code: function showHide(elementid){ if (document.getElementById(elementid).style.display == 'none'){ document.getElementById(elementid).style.display = ''; } else { document.getElementById(elementid).style.display = 'none'; } } function hideShow(elementid){ if (document.getElementById(elementid).style.display == ''){ document.getElementById(elementid).style.display = 'none'; } else { document.getElementById(elementid).style.display = ''; } } I wont take credit for the showHide code, but I will take credit for the hideShow portion, obviously a monkey could have coded the revers, but iot does make it that much more universal. As the original code was designed to show something that was hidden, add the revers to hide something that is showing and it's perfect. Now I will take a moment to say, though I have yet to find a problem with the code, it seems to work in most browsers, firefox, ie, safari, and validates for WC3 - In sure it has it's flaws. Until now, to show and hide divs I had used the MM_showHideLayers JavaScript function, which by default used the visibility style. It is of course a good script, and has many uses, it's not very big, but it is somewhat complex. The other thing to think about is that invisible objects still take up space. That's what is cool about the display:none: style, is that is not only invisible but it doesn't take up space. So here is how I used the above to JavaScript to make a simple onclick image toggle: HTML Code: <img id="on" src="on.png" width="50" height="50" onClick="javascript:hideShow('on'); javascript:showHide('off')" alt="on"> <img id="off" src="off.png" width="50" height="50" onClick="javascript:hideShow('off'); javascript:showHide('plus')" style="display:none;" alt="off"> Cool huh? Now this example does not have a rollover either, but since it uses to individual images and is not replacing one image wioth another you could easily apply a rollover to both images. But, hold on, look at the above code, isn't that essentially a rollover? Change the first onClick to onMouseOver and the second to onMouseOut and look at that a 'brand new' method for mouseovers. So lets take a look at this for a second, and compare MM_swapImage to this new hideShow method. As far as CSS rollovers I definitely prefer them to the MM_swapImage method, as they use a minimal amount of code. However they actually take a lot of math, construction the buttons is somewhat tedious, because css buttons use 1 image and change it's position, to work well you have to use a "blank.gif" and the the css can really add up if you have a lot of buttons: Also, you can't go directly to a button in the document, you have to fish through the css to make any adjustments. But they are fast, they don't need to be preloaded and... they are pretty cool. But anyway, swapImage and hideShow... The left is the MM_swapImage method. Now when you use the swapImage js you also have to use MM_swapImgRestore, MM_findObj, MM_preloadImages. You don't have to use the preload script but it does make thing work faster... supposedly, but that requires a onload script in the body tag, and if you have a lot of rollovers your body tag can get really long really quick. So what are the advantages, well we know for sure it works, and you only need on image in the document, however actualy having the image you are "swapping" too actually in the document can add functionality. So as you can see, on the right, the showHide method is, in total code, much smaller. True you do need to use two images, so the total code in the body is longer but, it's more than evened out bu the minimal JavaScript, and I think it's worth it. You don't need to use a preloader, you have full control over both images, the up and over state, and unlike the swapImage method, though it's rare you would need to, your up and over images can actually be different sizes, which is kind of cool. So here's the basic code for a rollover: HTML Code: <img id="up" src="up.png" width="50" height="50" onMouseOver="javascript:hideShow('up'); javascript:showHide('over')" alt="up"> <a href="http://google.com"><img id="over" src="over.png" width="50" height="50" onMouseOut="javascript:hideShow('over'); javascript:showHide('up')" style="display:none;" alt="over" border="0"></a> To add a link the button you just apply it to the "over state" image. And unlike swapImage, though it is overkill, you can also add a "downstate" image quite easily. So, back to the on/off button here is how you would code it using showHide with rollovers. HTML Code: <img id="on" src="on.png" width="50" height="50" onMouseOver="javascript:hideShow('on'); javascript:showHide('onover')" alt="on"> <img id="onover" src="on_over.png" width="50" height="50" onMouseOut="javascript:hideShow('onover'); javascript:showHide('on')" onClick="javascript:hideShow('onover'); javascript:showHide('offover')" style="display:none;" alt="onover"> <img id="off" src="off.png" width="50" height="50" onMouseOver="javascript:hideShow('off'); javascript:showHide('offover')" style="display:none;" alt="off"> <img id="offover" src="off_over.png" width="50" height="50" style="display:none;" onMouseout="javascript:hideShow('offover'); javascript:showHide('off')" onClick="javascript:hideShow('onover'); javascript:showHide('off')"alt="offover"> So here is what is going on: you have the upstate on.png image, when you mouse over it on.png is hidden and on_over.png is displayed. When you click on_over.png it is hidden and off_over.png is display, mouse off it and off.png is displayed. Make scene? Now be aware, when you click, you are also in a scene "mousing off" so some flickering can occur. Firefox handles everything pretty well, IE and Safari not so much. When you click the on_over.png the click tells it to hide on_over.png and show the off_over.png, at the same time the mouseoff tells it to hide on_over.png and show the on.png. So fortunately the toggle with rollovers isn't perfect, but perhaps some more tweaking of the code or maybe, in this case swapImage would work better to do the rollovers... But all in all I'd say its a solid concept. If you feel compiled to do so, reply with any comments, concerns or flaws you see. Hey guys. I need a little help with my HTML image rotator. Everything works fine, except the images don't show up on the right slide. All 4 images show up on the first slide. I can't figure out what's wrong. Any help will be greatly appreciated. Code: <!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>...</title> <style> #sliderwrap { height: 403px; } #sliderleft { width: 10px; height: 100%; float: left; background: #efefef; border: 1px solid #ccc; } #sliderleft div { height: 100px; border-bottom: 1px solid black; } #slidercontent { position: relative; width: 650px; height: 100%; float: left; border: 1px solid black; overflow: hidden; } #sliderimages { position: absolute; -webkit-transition: all .5s ease-in-out; -moz-transition: all .5s ease-in-out; -ms-transition: all .5s ease-in-out; -o-transition: all .5s ease-in-out; transition: all .5s ease-in-out; } #sliderimages img { display: block; } .s0 #slide0, .s1 #slide1, .s2 #slide2, .s3 #slide3 { background: #ccc; } .s0 #sliderimages {top: 0 } .s1 #sliderimages {top: -500px} .s2 #sliderimages {top: -1000px} .s3 #sliderimages {top: -1500px} </style> <script> var slide = 0; var interval_id = 0; function stop_timer() { clearInterval(interval_id); if (this.getAttribute("data-slide")) { slide = parseInt(this.getAttribute("data-slide")); document.getElementById("sliderwrap").className = "s" + slide; } } function start_timer() { clearInterval(interval_id); interval_id = setInterval( function() { slide = (slide + 1) % 4; document.getElementById("sliderwrap").className = "s" + slide; }, 3000 ); } window.onload = function() { start_timer(); var el = document.getElementById("slidercontent"); var divs = document.getElementById("sliderleft").getElementsByTagName("div"); for (var i = 0; i < divs.length; i++) { divs[i].onmouseover = stop_timer; divs[i].onmouseout = start_timer; } el.onmouseover = stop_timer; el.onmouseout = start_timer; } </script> </head> <body> <div id="sliderwrap" class="s0"> <div id="sliderleft"> <div id="slide0" data-slide="0"></div> <div id="slide1" data-slide="1"></div> <div id="slide2" data-slide="2"></div> <div id="slide3" data-slide="3"></div> </div> <div id="slidercontent"> <div id="sliderimages"> <img src="http://i.imgur.com/8iWz6.jpg"> <img src="http://i.imgur.com/1d2U6.jpg"> <img src="http://i.imgur.com/8iWz6.jpg"> <img src="http://i.imgur.com/1d2U6.jpg"> </div> </div> <div style="clear: both;"></div> </div> </body> </html> the title makes it sounds really confusing. Ok im making my first website, and i need help with a code, (as you can see on www.dalekblaster.co.uk) i have got a section at the top where the images change from one to another. The code is - HTML Code: // Set slideShowSpeed (milliseconds) var slideShowSpeed = 5000; // Duration of crossfade (seconds) var crossFadeDuration = 5; // Specify the image files var Pic = new Array(); // to add more images, just continue // the pattern, adding to the array below Pic[0] = 'http://www.dalekblaster.co.uk/images/banner/dalekblasternexttime.jpg' Pic[1] = 'http://www.dalekblaster.co.uk/images/banner/dalekblaster2.jpg' Pic[2] = 'http://www.dalekblaster.co.uk/images/banner/dalekblastersjanexttime.jpg' Pic[3] = 'http://www.dalekblaster.co.uk/images/banner/dalekblaster.jpg' // do not edit anything below this line var t; var j = 0; var p = Pic.length; var preLoad = new Array(); for (i = 0; i < p; i++) { preLoad[i] = new Image(); preLoad[i].src = Pic[i]; } function runSlideShow() { if (document.all) { document.images.SlideShow.style.filter="blendTrans(duration=2)"; document.images.SlideShow.style.filter="blendTrans(duration=crossFadeDuration)"; document.images.SlideShow.filters.blendTrans.Apply(); } document.images.SlideShow.src = preLoad[j].src; if (document.all) { document.images.SlideShow.filters.blendTrans.Play(); } j = j + 1; if (j > (p - 1)) j = 0; t = setTimeout('runSlideShow()', slideShowSpeed); Now i need help because, i want to link each picture on the slideshow to a differnet page or external site, but im not sure how. (but so they can go to different pages not the same one) can anyone help me? I'm not sure if this is an IE issue, css, html... I have all icons and images showing a broken image" red X OVER the actual image? I've never seen this on any other sites or even on any other sites i've done. They are all .png images but I use .png files successfully all the time? Anyone encounter this? Here's the HTML surrounding the image file: HTML Code: <div class="header logo2"> <!-- Logo begins here --> <a href="index.php" title=""><img src="images/logo.png" alt="" /></a> </div> <!-- END Logo --> Here's the CSS surrounding the image with no other images or backgrounds being called??? HTML Code: .header { height: 41px; } .logo2 { text-align: right; } See Image Attached... Can we place an image just right to an image having the style float:left? If so how? I tried keeping but the second image was coming below the first image. <td colspan="4"> <img src="images/Subject.gif" style="float: left" /> <b>Subject - Craig TestFile</b> <img src="images/dot.jpg" class="imageUnderLine" /> </td> Also the is there any way to remove the spaces that come in between when we use <hr> tag? For example if we write test<hr> the seperator drawn is after a line break with text. |