Sometimes the website works for ie but not firefox, sometimes works for firefox but not ie, then it works for both ie and firefox chromes and safari comes in.
wrong board and PFM [COLOR=‘Black’]bot or google translate?
All websites work for all browsers. If you don’t consider IE as a browser, that is.
i don’t know about you, but i’m using firefox, and i’ve never had a problem with the website.
You have to pray to the browser gods. Possibly sacrifice some lifestock.
If you are making a website and want to check that what you have entered is correct, then this should do the trick.
It’s pretty good at finding issues, and my best guess would be that if you eradicate any errors you have your website will be as compatible with other browsers as you can get it.
you would think so but until IE follows standards, nope.
Maybe IE9 will. Maybe…
I create for IE and make sure it runs fine up until at least 7 (though I strive for 6). I’ve found that IE can do everything other browser can, it only needs a different approach. But if it runs fine in IE, it runs fine in any other browser.
There’s an abysmal number of people still using IE6, sadly.
Indeed, that’s why I strive to support it as much as possible. Especially if the website’s purpose is professional, since those people generally never bother with any other browser or update apart from the one their computer came with.
Then they really don’t deserve to use… the Internet. lightning
Let’s make as much of websites as we can incompatible with IE6, so that they will be forced to switch the witc…browser.
This is the most hilarious post I’ve read on here today. You’ve obviously never made a website with the goal to be truly cross-browser and cross-platform compatible. Internet Explorer supports a lot of non-W3C standard features, as well a lot of wrongly formatted code, which other browsers will not accept.
The problem with cross-browser compatibility is not only that some browsers have bugs causing them to display certain elements of a webpage incorrectly, but also that many browsers support non-standard elements which some webdesigners are eager to use.
If you truly want to make a website that is compatible with all browsers, be sure to write code that is 100% comform W3C standards. You should also constantly check your website in as many browsers as possible. Usually when you check with at least Internet Explorer, Opera, and Mozilla Firefox you’ll be able to detect 99% of the problems with your webpage code.
Then, if you want your website to really work on all browsers, you should take cross-platform compatibility into account. Just because your flash object works nicely on your Windows browser, doesn’t mean it’ll work properly on a Google Android mobile phone, or on Linux for that matter. Also, when aiming for cross-platform compatibility, it is important to define your font sizes and line heights in pixels. If you create a website using the Verdana font without specific font dimensions, there’s a good chance it will look a little deformed on Linux, since Verdana is a Microsoft-only font.
Just a few tips on how to make a website truly compatible with all platforms and all browsers. Good luck with it.
You create a website according to the standards, you check it in IE, you see errors, you add code so it works in IE, it works in IE. You then check it in any other browser in existence and hey, it works on them as well Gasp
Once my design is set in HTML according to the standards, I don’t touch any other browser until I’m happy with how it looks and works in IE. 99.9% of the times I don’t have to touch anything up to work with other browsers.
I don’t know if it’s Chrome being retarded or something with this forum, but more often than not I get the Blue Page of Fail when I’m browsing these forums.
you must be getting that page banner ad thing.
Install this and stare in wonder at how awesome your browsing becomes.
https://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm
page banner ad thing wat