If it is a select then you are seeing a very old bug that affects IE6 and has been asked/solved many times before, for example Z-Index problems with IE6 and html element and iframe shimming or ie6 (and below) select z-index bug.
If it is a then you are seeing a very old bug that affects IE6 and has been asked/solved many times before, for example Z-Index problems with IE6 and html element and iframe shimming or ie6 (and below) select z-index bug.
Yes. It is tag. – Ajinkya Apr 11 at 13:00 You can hide the with JavaScript using one of the solutions from the questions linked in my answer above.
– andyb Apr 11 at 13:06 Thanks @andyb :) Is there any other solution? As I don't want to hide it. – Ajinkya Apr 11 at 13:07 If you use jQuery then the bgiframe plugin should solve your problem.
– andyb Apr 11 at 13:11 Without doing what bgiframe does yourself, you have to hide it in IE6. As I said in my answer, it is a problem that will never be fixed in IE6. – andyb Apr 11 at 15:44.
Use position: absolute and z-index attribute to position one element above another Related links: htmldog.com/reference/cssproperties/posi... htmldog.com/reference/cssproperties/z-in... Code ... Positioning: ... UPD I am top level div! I am on the bottom of life jsfiddle.net/vLx6X.
– andyb Apr 11 at 12:32 I don't use neither htmldog nor w3c :), I use russian resources, so I've picked up first what I've googled :) – fl00r Apr 11 at 12:33 I tried Position and Z-index but no luck. – Ajinkya Apr 11 at 12:36 check my update, – fl00r Apr 11 at 12:38.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.