@DarkAshelin Don't burst into tears, but that song is dedicated to Mako, the voice actor for Iroh, who passed away sometimes during the production of TLAB
> An action comedy centered on an overweight woman whose footsteps cause explosions and whose dual swords are used against anyone who makes fun of her.
ELABORATE A COMPLETE QUESTION PLENTIFUL OF DETAILS. IF YOU DON'T CARE ASKING METICULOUSLY DON'T EXPECT ANY ANSWER FROM US (OR EVEN OUR ATTENTION) thank-you
Semantics exists for a reason. Come on. @SecondRikudo im a young web designer you probably know this stuff way better then i do. So lets keep it short: there are many cases where simple <article> is better then <div class="section_with_lots_of_text">
> A South African term used to insult British people. The term implies the British person is worth a "wank" or is a "wanker". To qualify, a cup of tea or bad teeth must be present.
@Persijn My process of thought is that if you can't explain something simply but accurately in a way that even a complete beginner understands, you probably don't understand it well enough yourself.
@FrontpageExpert britwank A South African term used to insult British people. The term implies the British person is worth a "wank" or is "wanker". To qualify a cup of tea or bad teeth must be present.
@SecondRikudo i like your way of saying that I don't understand the semantic meaning of article but I would like to know your response to my suggestion that an article will often to always contain text.
@SecondRikudo britwank A South African term used to insult British people. The term implies the British person is worth a "wank" or is "wanker". To qualify a cup of tea or bad teeth must be present.
@FrontpageExpert britwank A South African term used to insult British people. The term implies the British person is worth a "wank" or is "wanker". To qualify a cup of tea or bad teeth must be present.
> britwank A South African term used to insult @KeyboardWarrior. The term implies that @KeyboardWarrior is worth a "wank" or is "wanker". To qualify a keyboard must be present.
I am using a CSS stylesheet from a markdown editor that has the following CSS.
p strong {
font-size: larger;
}
In the rendered HTML the titles that are always in the form
<p><strong>title</strong></p>
for example
<p><strong>Example of adding a new persistent rule</strong></p>
And then ...
"I have headings that are represented as p > strong instead of the proper heading tags and I want to target the strong tags only when there is no other text, how do?" 9 hours ago
Is there a way, using css selectors (no javascript), to select a child element only if there is no additional content?
I want to achieve the following:
<style>p b:only-child { color: red }</style>
<p><b>this should be red</b></p>
<p><b>this</b> should be not</p>
<p><b>this</b> <i>neither</i></p>...