The conditional comments mentioned above are to determine the browser type and then define what content is displayed in which browser. .
This dropmenu (drop-down menu) model comes from cssplay and was made after many studies and repeated tests by the author. I want to use this model to practice the principle of conditional comments.
Use dual styles to define styles for ie and non-ie respectively. If IE is used, based on final_drop.css Add a final_drop_ie.css
First look at how css under non-ie is defined .menu ul li ul { display: none; } /* specific to non IE browsers */ .menu ul li:hover a { color:#fff; background:#bd8d5e; } /*Define mouseover style*/ .menu ul li:hover ul { display:block; position:absolute; top:3em; margin-top:1px; left:0; width :150px; }
Under non-IE, the ul contained in li is displayed when the mouse rolls over, because these browsers support the li:hover usage
IE css under .menu ul li a:hover { color:#fff; background:#bd8d5e; } /*The ul contained in li is displayed when the mouse rolls over*/ .menu ul li a:hover ul { display:block; position:absolute; top:3em; left:0; background:#fff; margin-top:0; marg\in-top:1px; }
Inherit the final_drop.css style above, and the ul contained in li will not be displayed when there is no mouse time Because
So when the mouse rolls over in IE6, it is displayed through a:hover The ul content displays the same effect through li:hover under IE7.
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