On Jan 14, 2008 10:43 AM, Alain Reguera Delgado <alain.reguera at gmail.com> wrote: > Relevant changes: > > 1.7-29 > ====== > > - Resume CentOS mailing list discussion about messages presentation. > Now we can use two message styles. > > 1. Low contrast Message > > ||<id="lmimg" :^> attachment: ||||<id="lmtxt" (^> Text ...|| > > 2. High contrast Message > > ||<id="dmimg" :^> attachment: ||||<id="dmtxt" (^> Text ...|| > > The following classes are available: > > * class="orange" > * class="red" > * class="blue" > * class="green" > * class="violet" > > To use a class (i.e class="blue") we can use the following line: > > ||<id="dmimg" class="blue" :^> attachment: ||||<id="dmtxt" > class="blue" (^> Text ...|| > > If no class is used, then gray color is used. > > - Give 0.5em to locationline margin-bottom. Before this update > tables that were added at the beginning of the page, as first > element, were not properly shown due to the short margin > locationline element has. Now this is fixed. > > - Update image background. Now squares are really over a white > background. Before this they were over a transparent one. > > - Update comments. > > - It is no grey but gray, with "a" ;). Fix that!. > > - Make pre element not so yellow. Let it as it was inicially. > > 1.7-28 > ====== > > - Come back to 10% page lateral margin presentation. > > - Change color on messages left border. > > --- > http://wiki.centos.org/ArtWork/Wiki?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=modern-CentOS-1.7-29.png > http://wiki.centos.org/ArtWork/Wiki?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=modern-CentOS-1.7-29-1.png > http://wiki.centos.org/ArtWork/Wiki?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=modern-CentOS-1.7-29-2.png > > http://wiki.centos.org/ArtWork/Wiki?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=modern-CentOS-1.7-29.tar.gz > > What do you think now, does it could be a candidate for installation ? It's a go for me. This can be put in the production wiki. Nice work ! Regards, Tim -- Tim Verhoeven - tim.verhoeven.be at gmail.com - 0479 / 88 11 83 Hoping the problem magically goes away by ignoring it is the "microsoft approach to programming" and should never be allowed. (Linus Torvalds)