Hi - I know I can’t have the same id twice on one page but it’s working when one is in a td and one in a div, like this:
<table>
<tr>
<td id=“btmnav”>
<a href=“http://amzn.to/VNNoXQ” target=“_blank”>Click here to see the best deals in Water Ionizers at Amazon</a>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
(The tables are a relic from the distant past. They’re staying on the page. I know they shouldn’t be there. One day when time stops running away from me, I’ll remove them.)
No. ID’s are for single unique elements. If you want to specify an ID to style many elements you should be using the ‘class’ attribute - exactly like what you’ve done for your website (I cant see any duplicate ID’s but I can see duplicate classes).
For example this would be acceptable - however it is odd to assign the same class name to different tags. I think you would typically want same classes to both be either <td> or <div>, one or the other but not both. I don’t think there’s anything saying it’s not allowed but it will make things easier to code & understand.
<table>
<tr>
<td class="btmnav">
<a href="http://amzn.to/VNNoXQ" target="_blank">Click here to see the best deals in Water Ionizers at Amazon</a>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<div class="btmnav"><?php include("$rpath/1cde/btmnav.php"); ?></div>
Reading this should help explain it a bit better than i can:
Consider if you have two of the same id in your page then which of then should <a href=“#btmnav”> jump to? Wich one should a JavaScript getElementById() call reference?
Seems it’s more popular to use div structure nowadays. It’s more convenient to control the display. I’m trying to abandon the table structure when I work on a page.