While XHTML and
CSS are a powerful combination, there is one small wrench that has continued to
plague Web designers: browser support. While it didn't seem to be much of a
problem to add extensions willy-nilly, when it comes down to serious, full
support of the specifications, no browser has yet been up to the task. However,
it's important to note that they've come a long way.
Netscape 6, completely reformed from its extension-madness
days, now boasts good CSS support. Too bad its user base is down to less than 1
percent. Firefox 1.5, the Open Source dynamo which rose from the ashes of
Netscape's demise (and was even called Phoenix and Firebird early in its
history), has excellent CSS support as does Opera 9, whose user base is
expanding by leaps and bounds particularly in the handheld and mobile telephone
markets. And Internet Explorer, currently the most used browser, has steadily
improved its CSS support, although it still has a number of glaring bugs and
what sometimes seem like arrogant and obstinate omissions.
All in all, most users use browsers that support CSS either
well, or very well. While the number of users on legacy browsers a few years ago
might have given folks pause before contemplating a switch to CSS, that number
has dwindled below 5% (some say below 2%) and continues to fall. And even many
of these are on Internet Explorer 5.5 whose support, though not stellar, was
really not that bad.
In short, there's never been a better time to move confidently
over to CSS.
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