Not sure if anyone has mentioned this before Katiekat, but I use Firebug with Firefox for inspecting website code. The nice thing about Firebug is that when you select/hover the mouse over an HTML tag displayed in the inspection panel, it will highlight the area of the page associated with that tag. You can also right click on the displayed page and it will highlight the tag associated with that portion of the page in the inspector panel. It is very helpful when trying to determine what styling is currently being used to display the page. That probably would have helped you find the styling that was causing the gap. Hope that helps you in the future.
Comments
hello,
i think this could help you :
Player of Les Compagnons d'Ailleurs - A d&d3.5 campaign
Not sure if anyone has mentioned this before Katiekat, but I use Firebug with Firefox for inspecting website code. The nice thing about Firebug is that when you select/hover the mouse over an HTML tag displayed in the inspection panel, it will highlight the area of the page associated with that tag. You can also right click on the displayed page and it will highlight the tag associated with that portion of the page in the inspector panel. It is very helpful when trying to determine what styling is currently being used to display the page. That probably would have helped you find the styling that was causing the gap. Hope that helps you in the future.
Johnprime
Where the west is really wild!
The Valley of Life
F12 with chrome and firefox to open the developer tools :)
Player of Les Compagnons d'Ailleurs - A d&d3.5 campaign