I eliminated the khtml warning by deleting the "-khtml" and replaced it with "-moz". This is probably not the best solution, but the warning is gone.
I still have 2 "filter" warnings that I cannot figure out how to eliminate.
Thx Sweet
I eliminated the khtml warning by deleting the "-khtml" and replaced it with "-moz". This is probably not the best solution, but the warning is gone.
I still have 2 "filter" warnings that I cannot figure out how to eliminate.
Thx Sweet
I can't find a replacement for the "filter" command. I still have 2 "unknown property filter" CSS warnings on the main page. These seem to be my last 2 warnings that I can find on my pages. I want to keep the slideshow, so I'll live with the 2 warnings, unless someone can help.
Is programming a clean site possible or is it something to strive for but never really get there?
Thx Sweet
It's possible, but I dont think you have to get obsessed with it and forget about many other things you could have spent time to improve. After, as long as the site looks nice on the surface, no one cares about what's going on under the hood. Unless your targeted customers are computer geeks, which I assume that the answer is NO.
I no longer provide installation support on forum for all my modules. However, if there are real bugs with the modules please feel free to contact me
I have yet to visit a "clean" website! Even msn.com has 14 warnings right now! I agree that perfection is not worth the effort when good enough will still make you money.
Sweet
If you visit some sites that dedicated to css and html tutorials etc,... you will find it pretty clean. Even on my own ecommerce site, i get valid html and css on most pages. But again, it's not really worth it when you can do something else.
I no longer provide installation support on forum for all my modules. However, if there are real bugs with the modules please feel free to contact me
Coding for a clean site is definitely possible and what good coders always strive for. Why do you think a clean install of Zen Cart is error free for the HTML & PHP coding? Good coding by people paying attention to their coding is why. This is also the starting point for using correct code to provide various levels of script security.
The trick in coding, is to know the meaning of the errors / warnings, what they are about and their level of severity. Some can be safely ignored whilst some should be corrected.
In your case, I think it is safe to say you can ignore the Warnings and move on to other things.
Last edited by Website Rob; 31 Jan 2008 at 06:30 PM.
I noticed that my site is having parsing problems when viewing in Firefox (IE is fine). I experience delayed loading time when clicking the individual products from category pages. The Firefox Web Developer error console list the following errors:
Warning: Error in parsing value for property 'font'. Declaration dropped.
Source File: http://www.all4coffee.com/includes/t...icimghover.css
Line: 58
Warning: Unknown property 'behavior'. Declaration dropped.
Source File: http://www.all4coffee.com/includes/t...eader_menu.css
Line: 2
Warning: Error in parsing value for property 'font'. Declaration dropped.
Source File: http://www.all4coffee.com/includes/t...icimghover.css
Line: 58
Would anybody have any ideas how to fix this?
Anybody could help with the Firefox errors?...
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