- Is it possible to make cross browser
rendering site without using CSS
reset? - Is CSS Reset for all website, small,
one page, big? - Should we use write all css without
reset then only solve needed
rendering problems nad only keep
needed things in CSS Reset, or we
should use CSS Reset from starting
point?
Should i suggest to use CSS reset to new CSS HTML learner or not? I was thinking if i would suggest to use CSS reset then how he will know why we use CSS Reset. am i right?
Is it possible to make cross browser rendering site without using CSS reset?
It’s definitely possible to make sites that render similarly across browsers, but very difficult, whether with a CSS reset or not, to make them render pixel-for-pixel the same across all browsers (personally I don’t try that hard unless a client demands I do so). But for most cases, it’s doable.
Is CSS Reset for all websites (small, one page, big)?
I’ve used my own CSS reset for my entire web site as well as single-page side projects. I don’t really think it’s the size that matters, but again that’s just my own opinion. If you want to, you can always make your custom resets simpler for smaller sites, if browser anomalies aren’t a big issue.
Should we use write all CSS without reset then only solve needed rendering problems and only keep needed things in CSS Reset, or should we use CSS Reset from starting point?
The point of a CSS reset is not as much to solve rendering problems in individual browsers as it is to strip all default browser styles, whether they’re problematic or not, and start from a clean slate. To that end, a CSS reset is mostly meant to be used as a starting point.
Should I suggest to use CSS reset to new CSS/HTML learners or not? I was thinking if I would suggest to use CSS reset then how he will know why we use CSS Reset.
Sure, why not? I think it’s great if we share to CSS beginners about the differences in the ways browsers render things by default. As a starter I was also really confused by why Firefox 2 and older chose a default body font of
sans-serifinstead ofserif, while other browsers choseserif. By using a CSS reset we can save beginners time that they’d otherwise spend trying to work their way around browser defaults.