Looks the same to me in ie7/vista as it does in firefox/vista. are you using ie6?
I don’t have an xp box with IE6 handy,
Check my site and you will see. I see rounds…
Sorry, that’s not helpful. WHAT is exactly the problem?
It also looks the same for me in FF and IE.
I don’t see rounds, but I see this:
http://www.pixelita.com/temp/blog-crt-lt-chars.jpg
Is that what you are talking about?
Thread Starter
aclime
(@aclime)
Yeah jonimueller, that’s my problem. 🙁 Please help me..
Does this help?
http://tlt.its.psu.edu/suggestions/international/bylanguage/latvian.html
A lot of work just to keep IE6 happy, if you ask me. (It seems to be an IE only problem; looks okay in IE7, FF and Opera .. now WHY am I NOT surprised?)
Hmmm. The [Ą] in the sidebar is a real character in the Lithuanian alphabet.
The problem is with the posts titles: most of the characters with diacritics are not displayed. I just don’t understand why, I copy/pasted some of those characters on a test intall in titles, and it worked.
[OT: and can anyone here tell me why on earth I have to CTRL+C twice to save text to the clipboard? Doing it only once retains the previous clipboard contents. UGH!!!]
Oops, wrong language .. but you get the idea. That Penn State page has all the info about foreign language rendering and is quite useful. 🙂
anyone want to help me write a trojan that secretly installs IE7? these straggling IE6 users are really starting to annoy me.
it’s an update that’s worth it for png support alone.
Thread Starter
aclime
(@aclime)
Old, not updated windows. I’m using linux so [moderated!]
It’s only my website visitors problem.
So how to fix it?
http://tlt.its.psu.edu/suggestions/international/bylanguage/lithuanian.html
I can’t to find how to fix it? Am I dumb? :/