Hi, Jamesicus, Wow! Some great advice there. Thank you. I must admit, however, that this "DOCTYPE" stuff confuses the heck out of me. In order to fix my problem, I'm going to try what you said in the above quoted text rendered in bold. Should that suffice? But then you stated that I shouldn't even be using XHTML 1.1 and that I should use XHTML 1.0 or 4.01. Can you tell me where I can learn these markups, please?
Thanks for that, Stomme Poes. I had no idea! The form on the right looks fine in IE and Firefox. How do I get it to look OK with the type of machine that you're using? Note that the form's code was generated for me at Aweber.com; I did not write it myself. What can I do to fix it? Please tell me where I can learn to downgrade to 1.0. The space at the very top of the page contains a PHP code that I use for tracking visitors. The code cannot be seen when you view the page source. Given that there isn't a space but a PHP code, am I still forcing IE users into quirks mode? All of the errors that you specified are present in coding presented to me in Javascript and PHP. I am worried that, if I change these codes, their functionality will be compromised. I think I'll now try your suggestions nonetheless. Much appreciated! Thanks for your help!
Hi, Masterful, You are most welcome. I think you should read more on the subject before going any further -- the W3C tutorial I referenced in my previous post is an excellent starting point -- "Google" for other informational links. I think the recommendation of Stomme poes is best -- use XHTML 1.0 (preferably served as text/html) for ease of conversion. Undoubtably others here will provide learning references -- you can also "Google" for them or visit the W3C specification pages: W3C HTML 4.01 Specification W3C XHTML 1.0 Recommendation (Second Edition) James