没有样式就是最好的样式

Archive for January, 2007


javascript 图片转圈效果

Jan 31, 2007 Author: | Filed under: Uncategorized

随便在一个有图片的页面,地址栏执行…

显示更多

css控制打印

Jan 31, 2007 Author: | Filed under: Uncategorized

other……..

other……..

other……..

标题标题

12321321

123 123 321 321 321
123 123 321 321 321

现在想通过print.css 控制 除了printdiv以外的所有东西都不显示,并且 fieldset也不想显示,仅显示table,print.css如何处理???

opera mini 模拟器

Jan 29, 2007 Author: | Filed under: Uncategorized

Opera Mini Simulator 需要 java runtime

firefox 与 opera 热门度对比

Jan 29, 2007 Author: | Filed under: Uncategorized

via http://operawatch.com/news/2006/12/opera-vs-firefox.html

Articles on Digg’s homepage with the term “Opera” or “Firefox” in the titles over the past year:

Firefox: 301

Opera: 113

Articles that were posted on Slashdot over the past year containing the term “Opera” or “Firefox“:

Firefox: 146

Opera: 45

Blog posts containing the terms “Opera browser” or “Firefox browser“:

- Technorati:

Firefox: 200,752

Opera: 68,584

- Google Blog Search

Firefox: 192,964

Opera: 75,453

Webpages that were updated during the past year contain the terms “Opera browser” or “Firefox browser“:

- Google

Firefox: 145,000,000

Opera: 83,700,000

- Yahoo

Firefox: 34,300,000

Opera: 24,100,000

gmail 删除邮件快捷键(opera only)

Jan 29, 2007 Author: | Filed under: Uncategorized

End 键,删除邮件。IE和firefox都不支持。

opera Rendering engines and code names

Jan 29, 2007 Author: | Filed under: Uncategorized

A short history of Opera’s rendering engine.

The Opera browser, written by Jon and Geir, started live as MultiTorg Opera, a company project of the Norwegian telco Telenor. The browser that was released in 1996 as shareware after Jon and Geir made Opera a separate company was called Opera 2.0. This version was further developed, with 3.0 and 3.5 as significant milestones (3.0 adding Javascript support and 3.5 adding CSS1 support).

The next version of Opera that was being developed in 1999 and 2000, was codenamed ‘Elektra’. Nowadays people like to talk about ‘rendering engines’, but at that time Elektra was simply a codename for what was to become Opera 4.0: the entire browser. Elektra was designed in a manner that would make it easier to create versions for multiple platforms, not just Windows. The Elektra codebase would get better and better over the years, as the developers worked on improving it. Mac and Linux versions saw the light, but these versions were most of the time months or even years behind the Windows version. Opera 6.0 added the much needed Unicode support to this line, to make Opera a truly international contender. 6.0 was also the end of the line, and the Opera 6 codebase was also ported to the Symbian platform.

But at the time Opera 6 was being worked on, a few developers were already working on the next generation browser. And this one would truly have a separately developed browser core (rendering engine, scripting engine, networking stuff). The rendering engine, the part that was completely rewritten, was codenamed Presto. And at the same time a lightweight cross platform UI layer codenamed Quick was created. Together these components became the Opera 7 browser, which came out at the same time for Windows, Linux, and since 7.5 for Mac. Quick made it possible to develop a single user interface for multiple desktop platforms much, well, quicker :smile:

Opera 8 was the culmination of the Presto core development, and is as such a rock solid base for many releases we’ve seen in 2005 for various non-desktop platforms (Symbian, Brew, Windows Mobile, and several others). So we are finally seeing the end of the line for Opera 6.

The core developers are of course still developing, as can be witnessed by the Opera 9 previews. The codename for the Opera 9 release for the desktop platforms we hope to have this year is Merlin. The core of Opera 9 is a big update of Presto, with various new standards supported and lots of coding improvements behind the scene. But it is still named Presto.