Internet Explorer has a terrible habit of putting gaps underneath images if you have a space after the image code. It’s quite annoying when trying to line images up on top of each other and keep your code neat. Thankfully there’s an easy fix!
Internet Explorer has a terrible habit of putting gaps underneath images if you have a space after the image code. It’s quite annoying when trying to line images up on top of each other and keep your code neat. Thankfully there’s an easy fix!
When you see pop-overs on a lot of sites they often have a faded background behind them which helps the user focus on what’s in the pop-over and not the rest of the site. So to continue from Part 1 and Part 2 of the pop-overs tutorial I will show you how to achieve this. Again it’s fairly easy to do…
About a year ago a new world of websites popped up, they showed content above the content you were viewing without the use of flash. When learning how to do them, trying to explain them to clients was really hard without giving it a name they’d relate to. Thus I came up with the name “Pop-over”, because it’s not a pop-up, but they work in a similar fashion and they “Pop-over” the content. Today it is used readily by my clients and co-workers. I’m not sure if anyone else has given it another name, but from now on for me and my clients it will be known as a “Pop-over”.