>
> > 2) 'blah.css' contains only the CSS specs, nothing else. Is that as it
> > should be?
>
> Yes
>
Well -- or not :)
Just as we can use Perl to produce valid HTML, we can use Perl to
produce valid CSS. I use it often to produce dynamic CSS based on
User-Agent to work around gross deficiencies in some browsers (*cough*,
Internet Explorer, *cough*).
However, if you wish to do that - and more power if you do - you are
going to have to produce valid output:
........................... BEGIN PERL PROGRAM .........................
#!/usr/bin/perl
# file /usr/local/apache/cgi-bin/style.css mode 755
use strict;
use warnings;
use CGI;
our $query = new CGI;
print $query->header('text/css');
print <<'EOF'
BODY { background: url("/images/ruff.jpg"); font-family: "Helvetica", sans; }
TABLE { margin: auto; border-collapse: collapse; font-weight: bold; border:
double 3px; border-color: black; }
TR { border: double 3px;}
TD { border: solid 1px; }
TD.category { text-align: center; font-size: 120%; }
TD.red { color: red; border-color: black; }
EOF
;
............................ END PERL PROGRAM ..........................
Doing soemthing useful is left as an exercise to the reader ;>
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Lawrence Statton - [EMAIL PROTECTED] s/aba/c/g
Computer software consists of only two components: ones and
zeros, in roughly equal proportions. All that is required is to
sort them into the correct order.
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