@charset "iso-8859-1";

/*******************************************************************************
*  skidoo_too.css : 2005.08.29
* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
*  A remake of the skidoo layout with the middle column appearing first in
*  source ordering.
*******************************************************************************/

/* begin with generic selectors so that they can be overridden if needed
 * by classes deeper in the stylesheet
 */
.clear
{
	clear: both;
	padding-bottom: 1px;	/* for Gecko-based browsers */
	margin-bottom: -1px;	/* for Gecko-based browsers */
}
.hide
{
	display: none !important;
}
.inside
{
	/* glitch in IE caused by vertical padding in this class, so 0 padding is
	 * set here and those blocks that need the vertical padding must be 
	 * applied to the parent element. the purpose of this class is to provide
	 * horizontal padding without using hacks to get around IE's broken box 
	 * model. so it's okay to apply vertical padding to the parent element, 
	 * just not horizontal padding.*/
	 
	padding: 0 0em;
}

/* margin values and font sizes for headings, and margins on paragraphs
 * and lists are not consistent across browser platforms. to achieve a
 * consistent look we need to explicity set these values here. it may
 * seem an odd way to declare the margins like this but you never
 * know what kind of horizontal padding a browser may be using on an
 * element, and I only want to change the vertical padding.
 *
 * pixels are used here, rather than ems, because I want a consistent
 * margin on the different headings. if I use ems, 1em for an h1 element
 * is much larger than 1em on an h6 element. I don't wnat this.
 *
 * salt to taste

ul, ol, dl, p, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6
{
	margin-top: 14px;
	margin-bottom: 14px;
	padding-top: 0;
	padding-bottom: 0;
}
h1
{
	font-size: 220%;
}
h2
{
	font-size: 190%;
}
h3
{
	font-size: 160%;
}
h4
{
	font-size: 130%;
}
h5
{
	font-size: 100%;
}
h6
{
	font-size: 70%;
}
 */
/* alter some HTML elements' default style

a, a:link, a:visited, a:active
{
	text-decoration: underline;
}
a:hover
{
	text-decoration: none;
}
code
{
	font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;
}
label
{
	cursor: pointer;
}
table
{
	font-size: 100%;
}
td, th
{
	vertical-align: top;
}
 */
/* now we craft the core layout of the page. this includes positioning and
 * gutter space. colors and fonts should not come into play at this point.
 * when defining a border, default its color to white which is probably
 * the safest thing to do.
 */
body
{
/*	margin: 25px 4%;	 margin instead of padding for the gutterspace around 
	 			   the layout because IE breaks the layout when 
	 			   horizontal padding is applied to the body element.
	 			   % over pixels for that horizontal gutterspace so that
	 			   it automatically goes below 20px on low-res browsers
	 			   to create more space for the content. */
	font-size: 100.1%;	/* resolve some font size issues in some layouts for
				   some browsers. (in other words, i got no clue.) */
}
#pageWrapper
{
	min-width: 40em;	/* IE doens't understand this property. EMs are used
				   so that as the font size increases, the proportional
				   limitations (min-width) increase with it, rather
				   than creating a middle column that can only fit
				   3 or 4 characters in it. */
	width: auto;
}
* html #pageWrapper
{
	/* \*/
		word-wrap: break-word;
	/* invalid CSS but keeps IE from breaking horribly under narrow viewports */
}
#outerColumnContainer
{
	/* reserves space for the left and right columns. you can use either
	 * padding, margins, or borders, depending on your needs. however you
	 * can use the border method to create a background color for both left
	 * and right columns
	 */
	border-left: solid 160px #fff;
	border-right: solid 220px #fff;
}
#innerColumnContainer
{
	margin: 0 -1px;		/* compensate for the borders because of
				   100% width declaration */
	width: 100%;
	z-index: 1;
}
#leftColumn, #middleColumn, #rightColumn, * html #SOWrap
{
	overflow: visible;	/* fix for IE italics bug */
	position: relative;	/* fix some rendering issues */
}
#SOWrap
{
	float: left;
	margin: 0 -1px 0 0;
	width: 100%;
	z-index: 3;
}
#middleColumn
{
	float: right;
	margin: 0 0 0 -1px;
	width: 100%;
	z-index: 5;
}
#leftColumn
{
	float: left;
	margin: 0 1px 0 -161px;
	width: 160px;
	z-index: 4;
}
#rightColumn
{
	float: right;
	width: 220px;
	margin: 0 -221px 0 1px;
	z-index: 2;
}

p.fontsize-set
{
	text-align: center;
}
p.fontsize-set img
{
	border-width: 0;
}


/* everything below this point is related to the page's "theme" and could be
 * placed in a separate stylesheet to allow for multiple color/font scemes on
 * the layout. you should probably leave a default theme within this stylesheet
 * just to be on the safe side.	
 */


#outerColumnContainer
{
	border-left-color: #663366;	/* left column background color */
	border-right-color: #E3DAE3;	/* right column background color */
	background-color: #fff;		/* set the background color for the
					   middle column here */
}

#rightColumn .inside
{
	/* if you apply a font size to just #rightColumn, then its width,
	 * which is specified in EMs, will also be affected. you don't want
	 * that. so apply font size changes to the .inside element which exists
	 * inside underneath all three columns
	 */
	font-size: 90%;
	padding: 0 8px;
}

#middleColumn .inside
{
	padding-left: 15px;    /* UNCOMMENT when index.html has no left padding inbuilt to the table*/
	padding-right: 15px;    /* UNCOMMENT when index.html has no left padding inbuilt to the table*/
}

/******************************************************************************/

