OS X Firefox renders incorrectly a page rendered correctly by Safari
In OS X 10.9.5, Firefox 41.0.1 renders the page "http://grayspapayanyc.com/contact" as shown in the screen capture, whereas Safari 9.0 renders it correctly as shown in the other screen capture.
Any ideas? Thanks.
פתרון נבחר
This is not a bug in Firefox, but other browsers may be more forgiving than Firefox in respect to the missing of a clear rule. Other browser may assume that you want to start the DIV at the start of the line in case floating content is present
You will have to add this CSS rule to the element, either via a style sheet file or via an inline style rule like my screenshot shows. With the clear:both rule the container will be positioned at the start of the line and not immediately where the previous line ends (i.e. possibly at the right end of the page after the last character in that container and this can also depend on the current screen width).
See also:
I check it a bit more thorough and you can add the clear:both rule to this style sheet that you use in line 2077. The container I used before is created by the Google recaptcha script, so you need to go up a bit more.
#captcha { margin-left:70px; clear:both; }Read this answer in context 👍 0
כל התגובות (6)
Make sure your Java (Not JavaScript) is up to date Verify Java and Find Out-of-Date Versions {web link}
Version 8 Update 60 Release date August 18, 2015
http://www.ehow.com/how_11385212_troubleshoot-reset-connection-firefox.html
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/server-not-found-connection-problem
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/firefox-cant-load-websites-other-browsers-can
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/secure-connection-failed-error-message
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/connection-untrusted-error-message
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Error_loading_websites
This Connection is Untrusted is sometimes caused because the computer system clock is wrong. Check the time / date / time zone settings.
That is because of a missing clear:both CSS rule that makes Firefox position the container where the container before it ended.
Thanks for you responses.
Concerning Java (FredMcD's suggestion): I don't have Java installed. It isn't necessary for Safari, and I don't think that Firefox depends on it. JavaScript is enabled in both browsers.
Concerning cor-el's response: This is over my head technically but seems to indicate a bug in Firefox. If that is the case, what can I do to inform Mozilla?
Many thanks.
פתרון נבחר
This is not a bug in Firefox, but other browsers may be more forgiving than Firefox in respect to the missing of a clear rule. Other browser may assume that you want to start the DIV at the start of the line in case floating content is present
You will have to add this CSS rule to the element, either via a style sheet file or via an inline style rule like my screenshot shows. With the clear:both rule the container will be positioned at the start of the line and not immediately where the previous line ends (i.e. possibly at the right end of the page after the last character in that container and this can also depend on the current screen width).
See also:
I check it a bit more thorough and you can add the clear:both rule to this style sheet that you use in line 2077. The container I used before is created by the Google recaptcha script, so you need to go up a bit more.
#captcha { margin-left:70px; clear:both; }
Thank you very much for your diligence. I'm afraid I must have given the impression that I was in some way responsible for the website in question, which is not the case. I just wanted to know if a bug in Firefox was involved or not and, if so, to point it out.
You can contact the website and ask them to look into this issue with Firefox.