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Originally Posted by iBob
Thanks for all the opinions guys. I'm actually doing a project for the Western Michigan Art School. My boss suggested mocking up an iframe layout that would allow us to keep the navigation bars without using a server side include, to speed things up and whatever. I think I'm going to advise we stick to how things are now (except I'm in the middle of a CSS rewrite of the nav bar to get rid of those javascript rollover images). Thanks again for all the advise.
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If your webserver allows SSI includes or supports PHP (and thus PHP includes) I
highly recommend using them. I have done several websites with includes (
http://www.southwindsorswimclub.com for one), and found them very useful in quickly editing content while providing a nice enclosing feel to the site. A header.html and a footer.html are easily included and open and close my content area, so each page only need to be the content that actually goes in that page. It makes things much easier to track and edit, IMHO.
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Originally Posted by Raven_Writer
There's a problem with viewing the site in FireFox. I'm currently trying to figure out what is causing the problem.
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Two ideas. Try adding style="float: right" to the iframe tag, or extend the table that does your navbar with another td with rowspan=8 and that way it will -always- be inline with the navbar. Just make sure to set heights and widths appropriately. Oh, also you might be using percents for widths, and the percents could round off in such a way in FF that the iframe is
just too big to fit next to the navbar, and so its inserting a linebreak to get it down. Try reducing it's width slightly too.