161. I have to manually change the emulation mode to version IE 9 or 10, then it loads fine. IE and FireFox still working OK. You can change the order in whcih the css files are loaded. How come? if your css has the same specificity then which ever css file comes last will get overridden. I am fairly new to this, I bought a template and just modified the code a bit…, My site: containship.com it looks like only in Chrome. How come? If we know what you are shooting for we might be able to advise on the best methods. As a solution Add the bootstrap file first and then add your custom css stylesheet. Not thoroughly tested but something like this should work. The form now starts in the same position im IE8+, Chrome and Firefox so I’m not sure what you mean. My CSS Gradient does not work on IE 9. Certain URL does not open in Internet Explorer. **I’m happy to help with specific situations but i really feel that you need to get the basics of layout down before continuing and i don’t think this continual tinkering is letting you do that..**. All css should be external in 99% of cases. Note, in the two browsers, the Font Size, Color and Face works just not the color change upon mouse roll-over. I can already tell why, it is based on the resolution of your monitor…and not mine. I have created a 2-sided card that works in Firefox and Chrome but does not work in IE. The div with the ID of #buttons (which I missed before) is in the wrong place. 0. You may have to play with some widths / add a float property to the buttons div to get it right. The form is a different size in all those browsers because form elements are handled differently and are different sizes. (Isn’t hindsight a wonderful thing?). I followed everything exactly but the CSS file simply won’t work in IE11. Once you’ve ironed out any coding errors, we can try to help with any remaining problems.[/FONT]. Posting to the forum is only allowed for members with active accounts. If you are trying to position that form over to the right then just change the rules to this: That seems to put the script below the picture, The overlay should have had position:absolute added to it, Haha, well that brings me to my original problem, different browsers and monitors don’t like absolute :x. Browsers have no problem with absolute position (most of the time) and without wishing to offend it is your invalid structure and incorrect use of tables for everything that is the real root of the problem. It is a simple web page that updates an access database with the users submission. but i have added those jquery dialog , as you said those should not work as they are not , but there are many other things also not wokring in IE , like logo of site and other heading also not working in IE , means means h1,h2,h3 tags also not wokring. It does seem to be working correctly in FF and IE. *May or may not contain any actual "CSS" However, after uploading the site to the IIS server I am having issues with Google Chrome. There isn’t that much in it. I’m not sure exactly what issues you are still having. Next, remove this line of code: . Custom CSS will not work on Internet Explorer 8. A web page is a living breathing thing and should adapt to what is thrown at it. Of course those styles should be in the external css file and not in the middle of the code as that is invalid. The problem we still have, is supporting IE (Internet explorer). Any help would be appreciated. >my logo and menu are on the same div because the logo image height is much bigger than menu item height. Code not running in IE 11, works fine in Chrome. How come? Rather than have any empty div…just increase the height of nav. Some of the trouble with HTML and CSS lies with the fact that both languages are fairly simple, and often developers don't take them seriously, in terms of making sure the code is well-crafted, efficient, and semantically describes the purpose of the features on the page. You then have a