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11:01 PM
its like <a> tag but there is difference between :link and :visited
Just a way of differentiating between a visited(:visited) and non-visited(:link) link
Oh I meant to use classes and switched them to see if it was messing it up by chance but it wasnt
there is the new version that makes things clearer @StephanMuller
 
If you making a nav I probably wouldn't recommend using a:visited
 
just use, a, a:focus, and a:hover
I usually make a:hover and a:focus the same style
 
there is the fuly updated
 
use a single : for :not
 
11:05 PM
Me too @joshhunt
 
and I think > is the selector you are looking for
 
there I fixed it
:: is for pseudo-elements, not selectors
:not is a selector
*pseudo-class, sorry. they are both selectors
 
stephan is correct, however I would avoid :not in this case and go with the direct descendant selector >
so it would look like nav > ul li a
which means only the ul that is directly inside nav is selected
 
ok ty @joshhunt
 
no worries
 
11:10 PM
I agree with josh
 
mmm also I would change #current to .current
 
because if say your top level was current as well as one of the dropdown links
because you should never use an id twice on one page
Also I am one of quite of few people that recommend not using any ids in your css, it has no advantages to just using classes and a few disadvantages
 
^
I only use ids for js hooks
 
ah ill start doing that then
im a bit new so im having trouble with the descendant selector...
the ul isnt a child of the a, so how would i specify the top level a only?
oh like you did above i see
so it says only the ul's directly below the nav, then continues from there
 
11:21 PM
@WesleyCrushed show me what you have, i'll try to give some pointers (reg. ORM)
 
user652649
@CSᵠ ok, i will, thank you :P
 
@SethTaddiken yup, exactly
 
11:40 PM
aw, didn't reach daily cap
 
@StephanMuller what day cap?
 
rep
had an active day on SO, thought I might get there for once
 
^ bounty is your best bet
what does this do in php?
switch(key($test)) {
 
yeah, I spent way too much time giving quality answers
 
I understand what switch does, just not sure how it works with key
 
11:48 PM
researched a particular problem for over an hour and didn't manage to find the right answer
 
ouch, hate that
 
naw, it was interesting
if I purely did SO for the score I'd be picking the low hanging fruit
 
Strangely the switch(key... only seems to select the first key
oh ok so key always selects the first key unless you change the pointer of the array using something like next or prev
 
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