![]() Hopefully I’m just crazy and nobody else can replicate that, though. no other browser does this, and it’s not appropriate… You’ll get a different result in konqueror by rearranging the order tof the link elements on the page… most surprising. one regular and one special on which says only ![]() konqueror still has problems under the surface, largely with mime types, DTDs, javascript and the “cascading” in cascading stylesheets.Įxample of cascading problem in konqueror: I’m a firefox user though, also very at home in opera. I will concur with the article itself here also – no engine has better css3 support than khtml, with its support for “not” and suchlike already :) I blame the “If it aint broke, don’t fix it” mentality. You Could Use Visual Studio Code As the Editor of In-Browser Developer Tools min(), max(), and clamp() : Three Logical CSS Functions To Use Today. – better content control (you only look at pron when you WANT to… your KIDS only look at pron when they want to) – design is quicker and easier (and cheaper) … Consequently the end result is a much higher quality product The trouble with education is finding people with a long enough attention span to be educated. An easy 99.9% of users who leave the big blue e don’t look back. I think the main reason anybody doesn’t switch is because they don’t understand the benefits. We are a collection of web-savvy programmers - isn’t there some way to tackle this problem?įebruary 29th, 2008 at 12:11 I concur, it benefits everybody in the short term when someone switches from Internet Explorer (notice, I don’t mention which browser they switch _to_, that’s not really important) Obviously such a campaign is difficult in the face of MS’s superior advertising budget, but that’s assuming the campaign take place through traditional channels. The unthinkable The layout breaks and forces the entire flex parent element too wide. You don’t want that text to wrap, you want it truncated with ellipsis (or fall back to just hiding the overflow). I think that in order for these kinds of open source programs to really take off, it may take a campaign of education. Situation: you have a single line of text in a flex child element. Speaking personally, the reason it took me so long to switch as because I didn’t completely understand the advantages, and wasn’t sure I’d be able to access the same sites I always had. I recognize that Microsoft has a bit of a stranglehold on the market, but I don’t think it has to be that way. Situation: you have a single line of text in a flex child element. In the first place, why would anyone pay for something they can get for free? In the second, the very fact that this is open source means it is a better product. By all rights, this should be a race between Konquorer and Mozilla. I’m not sure why more people haven’t caught on to free solutions. A great success on the CSS3 front, and the addition of ellipsis won’t hurt either.
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