The following Style sheet is positioned exactly where I want it in FireFox & IE 8. Chrome renders it with more height ?
margin:-7px;/pull up into header div/
height:14px;
z-index:1;
width: 560px;
position:absolute;
The following Style sheet is positioned exactly where I want it in FireFox & IE 8. Chrome renders it with more height ?
margin:-7px;/pull up into header div/
height:14px;
z-index:1;
width: 560px;
position:absolute;
What element is your CSS selector been applied to as it may have padding causing the extra height.
It’s a img within a class.
“img within a class” doesn’t mean anything. You’d need to show us the page, I think, or at least a larger code sample.
CSS without the markup it’s applied to is meaningless – and snippets usually leave us guessing wildly as we can’t see the whole picture.
Though I have to ask, what’s your line-height set to? If you’re doing APO what’s with the negative margin? (or are you setting a top:50% we aren’t seeing?)
We’d REALLY need to see the whole page.
Link. It’s the refresh button.
I don’t see a refresh button there. You’d be more likely to get help if you made it clearer what you are asking about.
The refresh button across ‘enter code here’. It looks like a recycle symbol.
It looks the same to me in FF and Chrome, and the code for it looks nothing like what you posted above.
What version of FireFox ? Compare with FF 3.6 and Chrome. In Chrome the graphic is vertically positioned different.
FF 3.6? Heck, that’s gone the way of the dinosaurs.
I don’t have it any more. Up to 6 now.
The CSS you posted exists but its for a completely different element on the page, more specifically you have it as a selector for #navouter which is a completely different element on your page. Because of this Chrome is just following its native standards which forces anchor links to the baseline while Firefox forces anchor links to a middle alignment.
FF 3.6? Heck, that’s gone the way of the dinosaurs.
I don’t have it any more. Up to 6 now.
I haven’t decided between FireFox 7 Final (when released) & ChromePlus.
Because of this Chrome is just following its native standards which forces anchor links to the baseline while Firefox forces anchor links to a middle alignment.
What is the solution ? Don’t take this the wrong way, I’m not being nit-picky. I’m surprised ralph didn’t notice you started a sentence with “Because”. It’s all good
If you are talking about the captcha input alignment then try using the correct height of 16px which should allow it to align better.
.capcode input {
height:16px;
}
Oh, thank you.