There are many places to learn the correct syntactical parts of the standard which is now CSS 2.1, and CSS 3.0 in the wings. Whole books are dedicated to this subject. I have one that site that uses nothing but version 1.0, but they will degrade gracefully down to internet Explorer 3, Netscape Navigator 2.02 and pre-Opera 3.6 Links are attached.
No, a single colon in itself is not a valid example of CSS syntax.
CSS classes do work in FireFox. What is the main problem? (specifically)Have you checked that the syntax is correct?There is a lot to learn about things with CSS and browsers, you may need a hack or fix, if all else fails.
program it right
linktest
scheme://domain:port/path?query_string#fragment_id
No, a single colon in itself is not a valid example of CSS syntax.
p { font-weight: bold; /* font-weight: 700; does the same */ }
CSS classes do work in FireFox. What is the main problem? (specifically)Have you checked that the syntax is correct?There is a lot to learn about things with CSS and browsers, you may need a hack or fix, if all else fails.
p { font-weight: bold; }
Well, syntax is the fancy name for programming code. Without syntax, you wouldn't really have a program. It's good to analyze syntax as you are making sure that it is correct. If it isn't correct, then it won't work.
Daily syntax is a website where free menu templates can be found in CSS. Also this can be found on CSS menu market and in tutorials how to run a cafe/restaurant.
The syntax is correct - it may or may not be true.
Well, font-size and color are normally initially defined in the "body" element of the stylesheet. They can be elementally redefined for separate elements in the same place. Understand the necessity of hyphens and correct naming. Syntax is critical.
Yes, the sentence "Where you went is it correct" is not grammatically correct. It can be rephrased to "Is where you went correct?" for proper syntax.
NOW
program it right
linktest