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I checked this website on Firefox and Chrome and the alignment in the "Releases" section looks correct: http://www.mysecretathens.gr/Sera/releases.html

But if you open the page in Internet Explorer for some reason some of the text, as you can see, is aligned in the center. I have been struggling with this and can't find the solution.

I was wondering if the pseudo elements I was using in the table formats was causing the problem

table td:nth-child(even) {text-align:center; }

but I think this isn't the case. Any ideas?

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  • Which version of IE? Anything less than IE9 doesn't support pseudo-selectors like nth-child
    – Tieson T.
    Aug 30, 2012 at 2:37
  • I see. But the main problem remains the text alignement, which doesnt work even in IE9, which I have now.
    – a.litis
    Aug 30, 2012 at 9:52

3 Answers 3

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First of all your navigation anchors are floated - where is your clearing done to maintain a block like structure? This is why your navigation is broken in IE 7.

I don't think IE 7 supports nth-child in CSS - you may have to do this through Jquery or add a class on the table cell you want the content to be centred.

Hope this helps

Filth

/**UPDATED ANSWER HERE *****/

I think it's worth you reading up on "Clearing" floated elements here

Since IE 7 and 6 are a complete B&#@H at times you have to be able to develop what you want in other ways to accommodate for these scum like browsers. So, here is a Jsfiddle of what your "nav" css and html should look like according to current standards.

Also, I think you need to brush up on knowing when to use an "id" as opposed to a "class" - in this case you will / should only have one "nav" within your HTML therefore you want to give this an ID as it's unique.

If you want an in-line navigation, I find it's best to float the "li" elements and have your clearing done after the navigation by adding the class "clearfix" to the "ul" and style accordingly.

For a brief example on "clearing", I have a div after the nav which contains a paragraph. If you remove the class "clearfix" from the "nav" you will see the "paragraph" appear in-line with the "nav" as it should. So this is why it's important to clear all floated elements.

As for your table centring issue, the Jsfiddle I gave you is the route to take as it will accommodate all browsers and mobile devices.

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  • Thank you for your answer. Could you give an example of the code? What do you mean with navigation anchors? The menu bar? maybe {clear:both} ?
    – a.litis
    Aug 30, 2012 at 9:37
  • @a.litis Will edit my answer in an hour or so with code for you to use :-)
    – Filth
    Aug 30, 2012 at 19:02
  • Updated answer above - let me know if you have any questions!
    – Filth
    Aug 30, 2012 at 20:32
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You have malformed html on your page <center>cover: Poor Designers</></div> I assume its suppose to be <center>cover: Poor Designers</center></div>. Different browsers will render malformed markup in different ways, chrome threw the <center> away and ie wrapped it around a div

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  • Yeah thought about it also but doesn't matter, have ckecked it. Thanx anyways
    – a.litis
    Aug 30, 2012 at 9:45
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I'm thinking the table that it's inside of is defaulting to text-align center for some reason and that td is inheriting the value.

.text table{
    text-align:left;
}
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