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Old 02-22-2011, 04:59 AM   #84
DMSmillie
Enquiring Mind
DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'DMSmillie understands when you whisper 'The dog barks at midnight.'
 
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Posts: 562
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: London, UK
Device: Kindle 3 (WiFi)
Quote:
Originally Posted by cybmole View Post
thanks again - I am still looking for a good we page / crib sheet that covers the shorthand forms. books I have seen are aimed more at web page makers, I just want to understand all the stuff I see used in e-books.
There's no difference between the HTML and CSS used in ebooks, and the HTML and CSS used for web pages (at least when considering EPUB ebooks). Except that e-reader devices and applications might only understand a subset of CSS (and working out what does and what does not work in an ebook is largely a matter of trial and error). But it's not like there's a different "flavour" of CSS used in ebooks compared to web pages. It's identical.
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