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A collapsible element contains a toggle a reader can use to show or hide the element's content. Elements are made collapsible by adding the mw-collapsible class, or alternatively by using the {{}} template, or its variants {{Collapse top}} and {{Collapse bottom}}.
The first English-language release of "Antenna House XSL Formatter" was announced on the XSL-List mailing list on 22 November 2000. [2]Antenna House XSL Formatter V1.2 Alpha was one of six XSL Formatters that provided the test results [13] for the test suite for the XSL 1.0 Candidate Recommendation that was required for XSL 1.0 to proceed to the Proposed Recommendation stage.
Object-oriented CSS (OOCSS) is a CSS methodology developed and promoted by Nicole Sullivan. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The focus of OOCSS is the idea of treating page elements as objects , giving all these objects classes , treating objects’ classes as single entities in style sheets, and taking it from there.
CSS2 in May 1998 (later revised in CSS 2.1 and CSS 2.2) extended CSS1 with facilities for positioning and table layout. The preference for using HTML tables rather than CSS to control the layout of whole web pages was due to several reasons: the desire of content publishers to replicate their existing corporate design elements on their web site;
Sites that use CSS with either XHTML or HTML are easier to tweak so that they appear similar in different browsers (Chrome, Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Opera, Safari, etc.). Sites using CSS " degrade gracefully " in browsers unable to display graphical content, such as Lynx , or those so very old that they cannot use CSS.
Main menu. Main menu. move to sidebar hide. Navigation ... Download QR code; Print/export ... CSS codes, named after their ...
CodePen is an online community for testing and showcasing user-created HTML, CSS and JavaScript code snippets. It functions as an online code editor and open-source learning environment, where developers can create code snippets, called "pens," and test them.
As of June 2011, Firefox 5 includes CSS animations support. [4] CSS animation is also available as a module in the nightly builds of WebKit as well as Google Chrome, Safari 4 and 5 and Safari for iOS (iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad), Android versions 2.x and 3.x, Internet Explorer 10+ and Microsoft Edge browser, the BlackBerry OS 6 web browser, with the -webkit-prefix.