CSS is a skill to be learned and you need to understand what it can and cant
do. Not all browsers are spec compliant, some implement it all and some non
at all. The writer of this artcile goes some way to outlining the
considerations for most popular browsers.
http://www.utoronto.ca/ian/books/xht...pt/css-4a.html
....and of course the Mozilla guide is required reading.
http://www.mozilla.org/docs/web-deve...l/xbdhtml.html
which list the following tools as helpful
a.. Macromedia Dreamweaver
b.. Astound Dynamite
c.. Netobjects Fusion 3.0
d.. mBed Interactor
e.. ExperTelligence WebberActive 4.0
--
Regards
John Timney
ASP.NET MVP
Microsoft Regional Director
"moondaddy" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>I have several web apps that need to be cross browser compatible, however,
>I don't have the time to learn how to write html and css files for Netscape
>and all the other main stream browsers out there. Can anyone recommend
>some good tools that I could use to model out a webpage for 1 or more
>non-i.e. browsers. from there I could see the difference in it's html and
>the html I wrote for i.e.. I would also want it to have a wizard to create
>the css file similar to what I can do in VS 2003.
>
> Please advise.
>
> --
> (E-Mail Removed)am
>