In chrome I see neither cite nor block quote.
Spike ,'Potential'
Natter 70: Hookers and Blow
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Both those look like normal text to me, Ginger.
this is a test using the caret
Worked for me. I'm on Firefox.
In page source, Ginger's "cite test" had no tag other than the paragraph tag.
FWIW, the Two-Minute Mayo method did not work for me. But I have an ancient stick blender, so maybe it's just weak or something.
And the blockquote "this" up there looks fine to me. indented and pretty much like quotes have always looked, afaict.
weird
weirder
weirder
It's not showing dfn or cite in the code.
I'd love to help more but I think I've hit the pinnacle of my patience limits with debugging this week. I just went all RantyMcCrankerPants to Maria over my work stuff. For something like an hour. And I kept finding new things to get irked over. I might be a wee bit fried by the past few weeks. Or years. But I got a raise and a promotion??
You mean the page source?
No--I don't know Chrome or IE, but Firefox and Opera let you isolate an element on the page and trace what styles apply to it. So I can tell that a
quote
has my styles applied to it in 2.css (my custom style sheet) and then monospace is applied from line 190 of buffista.css, more styling from 185 of buffista.css (which also applies to the % propmpt which expands to t blockquote for debugging purposes. And it also shows which styles are overridden in both style sheets, so I can work out why it has the net formatting it does. I would like to see for someone who's not getting monospace or block and indentation what is actually being applied, and what's missing or overridden.
So if you can see what's the difference between what's applied when you % and when you > it would help me work shit out.
Someone in the apartment upstairs is playing an amped guitar. I want to go to sleep. Grrrrrrrr
I am wounded. Slain to the very core. Inconsolable.
Neither of the frozen juices I enjoy (I alternate the apple/raspberry with the passion fruit since the former can be too tart again and again --diluted by half again with fizzy water) seem to be in my local supermarket. I did notice that the labels for the one I enjoyed the most said something about clearance, but hey! What does that mean...
So now I have a Welch's grape (icky fizzy) and some Hawaiian punch I am sure will be too sweet. As red juice is wont to be.
I need a new juice,
One that won't make me sick
In Opera (12) the cite example is still plain text but the block quote is block quote.