Mar. 4th, 2005
azeotropes and little titles
Mar. 4th, 2005 10:36 pmI've really got to get working on my lab writeup, but instead I'm posting here on the off chance that anyone will actually understand what an azeotrope is and why it was good that we had one in the last experiment when normally it's a terrible thing. Something about how it lets you separate the components of a mixture, yes I get that, but the how is eluding me.
Another thing that's eluding me is why the date and title classes on my blog show up correctly in Internet Explorer but not in Mozilla Firefox, which is my main browser, as much as I like the colored scrollbars. So, if anyone with CSS knowledge could take a look at the source code and possibly figure it out...I'd love to know why Firefox shows the dates and titles in little tiny type (the same size as the body text, which is why I believe it's a CSS issue) and IE shows them the way they are supposed to be, with correct CSS. Bugger invalid code. Ah well. I don't understand how they could go from working on the last layout to not working on the new when I didn't change the code. Bugger and disaster.
Oh, and Phoenix, the LJ client for the Mac, is really nice. Yay for something that works.
Another thing that's eluding me is why the date and title classes on my blog show up correctly in Internet Explorer but not in Mozilla Firefox, which is my main browser, as much as I like the colored scrollbars. So, if anyone with CSS knowledge could take a look at the source code and possibly figure it out...I'd love to know why Firefox shows the dates and titles in little tiny type (the same size as the body text, which is why I believe it's a CSS issue) and IE shows them the way they are supposed to be, with correct CSS. Bugger invalid code. Ah well. I don't understand how they could go from working on the last layout to not working on the new when I didn't change the code. Bugger and disaster.
Oh, and Phoenix, the LJ client for the Mac, is really nice. Yay for something that works.