1.5

Table Of Contents
1.
On the Resources pane, expand the Contexts folder, expand the folder of the
corresponding context and then right-click the template.
2.
Click the tab Includes.
3.
Click a CSS file and use the Up and Down buttons to change the order in which the style
sheets are read.
4.
Note: Moving a style sheet up in the list gives it less weight, because style sheets read
later will override previous ones in case of conflicting rules.
How to position elements
To position elements in relation to each other in a template, wrap those elements in a Table or
Box (see "Table" on page445 and "Boxes" on page419) and/or use the Spacing property of
the elements. The Spacing property can also be used to indent elements or create a hanging
paragraph or image; see "Spacing" on page478. Guides help to align elements as well; see
below.
Where to use Tables and Boxes
Tables, Positioned Boxes and Inline Boxes can help position elements in relation to other
elements. It depends on the context which element is best to use.
In the Email context, Tables are the most reliable way to position text and images; see
"Designing an Email template" on page308 and "Table" on page445.
In the Web context, Inline Boxes are the preferred way to position elements; see "Boxes" on
page419. Tables should only be used to display data in a tabular format, not to position text
and images. Tables used in web pages to position elements (and often, Positioned Boxes)
make those pages less accessible to users with disabilities and to viewers using smaller
devices.
In the Print context, Tables can be used to position elements, as well as both types of Boxes;
see "Table" on page445 and "Boxes" on page419.
Spacing
Boxes, tables, paragraphs and many other elements have a margin and padding.
The margin is the white space around an element, outside the border. It is used to position an
element in relation to the other elements, by putting more space between the element and its
surrounding elements.
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