Odd HTML problem! help please

SpaceshipSpaceship
Watch

emalen

Established Member
Impact
0
An odd problem, one that I don't notice in Safari on my MAC, but on my Internet Explorer, I do - i haven't checked a pC yet, as I just noticed it, but I will.

On my home page, The background is grey (#CCCCCC), on all my pages, and all my code, the background is CCCCCC - yet the grey background doesn't seem to work on files that are in certain folders.

For instance, the homepage, the grey background is fine:
http://www.eventworks.ca/

Yet, on all my mini sites that are in folders, the grey background doesn't seem to appear properly? Some Examples:

http://www.eventworks.ca/event_bijeshandtara/index.php
http://www.eventworks.ca/event_oaktraggrad05/index.php
http://www.eventworks.ca/event_theclassic/index.php

I have no idea why this is happening and it's quite frustrating... as the bgcolor is the same!

any help/suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks,

emalen
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Unstoppable Domains — AI StorefrontUnstoppable Domains — AI Storefront
works perfectlly for me (PC - WinXP - MSIE)

an idea would be to create a gif picture of 1 pixel that is your chosen color (so a 1 pixel picture and color it #cccccc). Then in the body tag set that picture as your background.

Hope this helps
 
0
•••
i think the problem is isolated to just mac Internet Explorere (for some reason)... as long as it looks good on a PC with IE, i'm happy.
 
0
•••
have you tried the bg image? It should work.

In the css code try:
Code:
body{
background-image: url('bg.gif');
}
 
0
•••
It works on my Internet Explorer on my mac, and on my XP. The MSIE on my mac is a beta so it should work on next generation IE for mac
 
0
•••
I dont know it works fine here.Um i have no idea what could be wrong.
 
0
•••
CatchedCatched

We're social

Escrow.com
Spaceship
Rexus Domain
CryptoExchange.com
Domain Recover
CatchDoms
DomDB
NameFit
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back