- From: Patrick H. Lauke <redux@splintered.co.uk>
- Date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 00:59:11 +0100
- To: www-style@w3.org
Tim Slattery wrote: > In our world, we use a standard stylesheet. That sheet has an entry > for the "body" tag that includes "font-size:75%". I'm not sure what it > takes 75% of, but that's not the question.... > > I have a page that consists of nested tables. If I don't specify any > font-size attribute on the outer table, everything appears in the > "full" font size, that is, 100% of whatever the body tag is taking 75% > of. The table doesn't seem to think that it's part of the "body". > > If I specify "100%" for the outer table, then text within it is the > same size as body text: 75% (of something). But the text within the > nested table is the same 100% of whatever the body is taking 75% of. > Makes no sense to me. > > So I have to specify 75% on the inner tables, and 100% on the outer > one. This is true in both IE and Gecko browsers. > > I don't understand what's going on. Does anybody"? Frankly, I don't understand what you're actually trying to achieve. Do you have a url that demonstrates your current issue? P -- Patrick H. Lauke ______________________________________________________________ re·dux (adj.): brought back; returned. used postpositively [latin : re-, re- + dux, leader; see duke.] www.splintered.co.uk | www.photographia.co.uk http://redux.deviantart.com ______________________________________________________________ Co-lead, Web Standards Project (WaSP) Accessibility Task Force http://webstandards.org/ ______________________________________________________________ Take it to the streets ... join the WaSP Street Team http://streetteam.webstandards.org/ ______________________________________________________________
Received on Thursday, 31 May 2007 23:59:19 UTC