As I've said elsewhere, I am no friend of relative complexity, as dictated by third-party Basic-CSS. Every author of this type of Style-Statement obviously thought there was something useful in them at the time, but when it comes to deciding which Style-Statement you should use, and what exactly they are supposed to look like, there are as many opinions as there are CSS Themes.
Yet another dimension is added to the problem in the universally popular world of Browsers. How can a Browser-seller claim to be pursuing a particular philosophy, if it has to be altered from version to version? And the lack of explicit information in the Website-CSS means the Fonts, -Sizes and Distances in Lists and Headings look very different from one browser to the next.
The most radical, and certainly the easiest method for eliminating these problems from your Website from the beginning (or at least minimizing them), is to iron out all the Style instructions with ResetCSS . You can find many CSS-instruction units that will solve the problem on the Internet.
If you want to reset your Style-Statements in a really consistent manner, it leaves nothing out; it sets the Margin- and Padding-values to 0, and even erases the Bold-statements for all tags including <strong>. As you can see with the Strong-Statement shown, there are many different approaches, none is right or wrong, its just a question of taste. So anyone can, with confidence, type "ResetCSS" into their search engine, and use one of the variants.





















