Saturday 22nd of November 2008 06:57:44 AM

Nice and Free CSS Templates

Example

vertical-alignIE4 P/P IE5 P/Y NN4 N/N Op3 P/-

Used to set the vertical alignment of an element's baseline with respect to its line-height. Negative percentage values are permitted, and will cause the element to be lowered, not raised.

Example

white-spaceIE4 N/N IE5 N/Y NN4 P/P Op3 N/-

This property defines how whitespace within the element is treated. normal acts like

This site contains free css templates for your website - Just copy and paste and there you have a stunning website !

Menu und content
dynamic

Menu fixed, content
dynamic

Menu und content
dynamic

3 columns all
dynamic

4 columns all
dynamic

Menu floating

Menu fix, Inhalt u.
Head dynamic

3 columns fix
centered

dynamic mit
Head und Footer

fixed BOX centered

dynamic BOX
centered

fixed Box total
centered
<!-- ...or, to put it another way... --> <P> bold <SPAN> bold <STRONG> regular <B> regular <STRONG> regular </STRONG></B></STRONG></SPAN>. </P>

Ignoring the fact that this would be entirely counterintuitive, what we see in Figure 5-16 is that the main paragraph text has a weight of 900 and the SPAN aweight of 700. When the STRONG text iswindow itself!

TIP

Remember that padding, borders, and content widths can never be negative. Only margins can be less than zero.

Negative margins have an impact on vertical formatting as well, affecting how margins are collapsed. If there are negative vertical margins, then the browser should take the absolute maximum of the
e-mail: &nbsp;<IMG ALT="Great Page, Mad Dog!" src=mailbox.gif></a> so you can complain about this page.  The link encloses both 
the image (with default border) and the blue underlined text. Note that I specified the text for the subject line (the sender can change this). I could also specify ?cc= or ?bcc= and list e-mails to receive copies or blind copies. Navigator handles any one of these options; Explorer can handle all three. Here's a link to my
e-mail:  so you can complain about this page.  The link encloses both the image (with default border) and the blue underlined text.  Note that I specified