<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN">
RESULTAAT
Platform: Win32Text is not selectable in IE5/Mac and is selectable only with great difficulty in IE6/Win and in addition there is a horizontal scrollbar in IE5/Mac. Why? Simple. IE/Win does not like absolute positioning. IE/Mac does not like it either. Ironically, absolute positioning works well in Netscape 4. Seems absolute positioning is the only part of CSS1 that Netscape attempted to get right in their 4.0 browser. Which makes sense in a way. In 1998, when Netscape 4 was dumped on the world like an incurable virus, semantic markup and separation of presentation from structure were not high on most people’s wish lists. Absolute positioning promised visual control, and that’s pretty much all most of us cared about. The horizontal scrollbars that appear in some browsers are caused by CSS bugs in those browsers Text is not selectable in IE5/Mac and is selectable only with great difficulty in IE6/Win and in addition there is a horizontal scrollbar in IE5/Mac. Why? Simple. IE/Win does not like absolute positioning. IE/Mac does not like it either. Ironically, absolute positioning works well in Netscape 4. Seems absolute positioning is the only part of CSS1 that Netscape attempted to get right in their 4.0 browser. Which makes sense in a way. In 1998, when Netscape 4 was dumped on the world like an incurable virus, semantic markup and separation of presentation from structure were not high on most people’s wish lists. Absolute positioning promised visual control, and that’s pretty much all most of us cared about. The horizontal scrollbars that appear in some browsers are caused by CSS bugs in those browsers Text is not selectable in IE5/Mac and is selectable only with great difficulty in IE6/Win and in addition there is a horizontal scrollbar in IE5/Mac. Why? Simple. IE/Win does not like absolute positioning. IE/Mac does not like it either. Ironically, absolute positioning works well in Netscape 4. Seems absolute positioning is the only part of CSS1 that Netscape attempted to get right in their 4.0 browser. Which makes sense in a way. In 1998, when Netscape 4 was dumped on the world like an incurable virus, semantic markup and separation of presentation from structure were not high on most people’s wish lists. Absolute positioning promised visual control, and that’s pretty much all most of us cared about. The horizontal scrollbars that appear in some browsers are caused by CSS bugs in those browsers Text is not selectable in IE5/Mac and is selectable only with great difficulty in IE6/Win and in addition there is a horizontal scrollbar in IE5/Mac. Why? Simple. IE/Win does not like absolute positioning. IE/Mac does not like it either. Ironically, absolute positioning works well in Netscape 4. Seems absolute positioning is the only part of CSS1 that Netscape attempted to get right in their 4.0 browser. Which makes sense in a way. In 1998, when Netscape 4 was dumped on the world like an incurable virus, semantic markup and separation of presentation from structure were not high on most people’s wish lists. Absolute positioning promised visual control, and that’s pretty much all most of us cared about. The horizontal scrollbars that appear in some browsers are caused by CSS bugs in those browsers