ï»?foo {} /* W3C CSS validator likes CSS files to start with a class rather than a comment. Soooooo.... *//* This style sheet is intended to contain OFTEN CHANGED rules used when the Menu control adapter is enabled. *//* When the Menu control's Orientation property is Vertical the adapter wraps the menu with DIV *//* whose class is AspNet-Menu-Vertical. *//* Note that the example menu in this web site uses relative positioning to force the menu to occupy *//* a specific place in the web page.  Your web site will likely use a different technique to position your *//* menu.  So feel free to change all the properties found in this CSS rule if you clone this style sheet. *//* There is nothing, per se, that is magical about these particular property value choices.  They happen to *//* work well for the sample page used to demonstrate an adapted menu. */.PrettyMenu{	float: left;    height:100%;}.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Vertical{    position:relative;    top: 3em;    left: 0;    z-index: 300;}/* The menu adapter renders an unordered list (ul) in HTML for each tier in the menu. *//* So, effectively says: style all tiers in the menu this way... */.PrettyMenu ul{    /*background:#CCF2FB;*/    background-color:#545454;}/* Top tier */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Vertical ul.AspNet-Menu{        width: 9em;}/* This rule effectively says: style all tiers EXCEPT THE TOP TIER in the menu this way... *//* In other words, this rule can be used to style the second and third tiers of the menu without impacting *//* the topmost tier's appearance. */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu ul{        width: 10.5em;    left: 8.9em;    top: -1em;    z-index: 400;}.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu ul ul{    width: 11.5em;    left: 10.4em;}/* The menu adapter generates a list item (li) in HTML for each menu item. *//*æ­¤å¤„ä¿®æ”¹æ‰€æœ‰liçš„èƒŒæ™?//* Use this rule create the common appearance of each menu item. */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li{    background:#545454 repeat-x;}/* Within each menu item is a link or a span, depending on whether or not the MenuItem has defined it's *//* NavigateUrl property. By setting a transparent background image here you can effectively layer two images *//* in each menu item.  One comes from the CSS rule (above) governing the li tag that each menu item has. *//* The second image comes from this rule (below). */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li a,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li span{    color: #CCF2FB;    padding: 4px 16px 4px 8px;    border-bottom: 0;    background: transparent url(arrowRight.gif) right center no-repeat;}/* When a menu item contains no submenu items it is marked as a "leaf" and can be styled specially by this rule. */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Leaf a,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Leaf span{    background-image: none;}/* Not used presently.  This is here if you modify the menu adapter so it renders img tags, too. */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li a img{    border-style: none;    vertical-align: middle;}/* When you hover over a menu item, this rule comes into play. *//* Browsers that do not support the CSS hover pseudo-class, use JavaScript to dynamically change the *//* menu item's li tag so it has the AspNet-Menu-Hover class when the cursor is over that li tag. *//* See MenuAdapter.js (in the JavaScript folder). */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover{    background:#7795BD;}.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover a, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover span, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover a,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover span,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover li:hover a, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover li:hover span, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover li.AspNet-Menu-Hover a,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover li.AspNet-Menu-Hover span,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover li:hover ul a:hover, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover li:hover ul span.Asp-Menu-Hover, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul a:hover,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul span.Asp-Menu-Hover{    color: White;}.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover ul a, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover ul span, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul a,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul span,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover li:hover ul a, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover li:hover ul span, .PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul a,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul span{    color: White;}/* While you hover over a list item (li) you are also hovering over a link or span because *//* the link or span covers the interior of the li.  So you can set some hover-related styles *//* in the rule (above) for the li but set other hover-related styles in this (below) rule. */.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li a:hover,.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li span.Asp-Menu-Hover{    color: White;    background: transparent url(activeArrowRight.gif) right center no-repeat;}.PrettyMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Leaf a:hover{    background-image: none;}/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- *//* When the Menu control's Orientation property is Horizontal the adapter wraps the menu with DIV *//* whose class is AspNet-Menu-Horizontal. *//* Note that the example menu in this web site uses absolute positioning to force the menu to occupy *//* a specific place in the web page.  Your web site will likely use a different technique to position your *//* menu.  So feel free to change all the properties found in this CSS rule if you clone this style sheet. *//* There is nothing, per se, that is magical about these particular property value choices.  They happen to *//* work well for the sample page used to demonstrate an adapted menu. */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal{    position: relative;    left: 0em;    top: 0;    z-index: 300;}/* This rule controls the width of the top tier of the horizontal menu. *//* BE SURE TO MAKE THIS WIDE ENOUGH to accommodate all of the top tier menu items that are lined *//* up from left to right. In other words, this width needs to be the width of the individual *//* top tier menu items multiplied by the number of items. */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu{    width: 60em;/*77em*/    }/* This rule effectively says: style all tiers EXCEPT THE TOP TIER in the menu this way... *//* In other words, this rule can be used to style the second and third tiers of the menu without impacting *//* the topmost tier's appearance. *//* Remember that only the topmost tier of the menu is horizontal.  The second and third tiers are vertical. *//* So, they need a much smaller width than the top tier.  Effectively, the width specified here is simply *//* the width of a single menu item in the second and their tiers. */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul{        width: 7.5em;    left: 0;    top: 100%;}.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul ul{    top: 1.2em;}.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul ul{    width: 8.5em;}/* Generally, you use this rule to set style properties that pertain to all menu items. *//* One exception is the width set here.  We will override this width with a more specific rule (below) *//* That sets the width for all menu items from the second tier downward in the menu. */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu li{    width:auto;    _width: 6em;/*ie6 hack*/    +margin-top:3px;    text-align: left;}/* This rule establishes the width of menu items below the top tier.  This allows the top tier menu items *//* to be narrower, for example, than the sub-menu items. *//* This value you set here should be slightly larger than the left margin value in the next rule. See *//* its comment for more details. */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul li{    text-align:left;    width: 8em;}.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul ul li{    width: 8.5em;}/* Third tier menus have to be positioned differently than second (or top) tier menu items because *//* they drop to the side, not below, their parent menu item. This is done by setting the last margin *//* value (which is equal to margin-left) to a value that is slightly smaller than the WIDTH of the *//* menu item. So, if you modify the rule above, then you should modify this (below) rule, too. */.PrettyMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu li ul li ul{    margin: -1.4em 0 0 7.75em;}/* ------------------------------------------------------------------- *//* Specific to this sample web site. *//* These rules are probably not useful in your site. */#SampleMenu{    position:relative;    height: 13em;    font-size:small;    font-family: Tahoma;}#SampleMenu #Sample-Content{    width: 44em;    height: 10em;    overflow: hidden;    position:absolute;    left: 9.5em;    top: 2em;    padding: 10px;    background: #B9D3EE;    font-family: "Times New Roman";    font-style:italic;    color: Black;    }/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- *//* Used when the Menu adapter is NOT used. *//* These styles are used by the Menu's skin, found in this theme's skin file. */#SampleMenu .Menu-Skin-Horizontal{    position:absolute;    left: 9.5em;    top: 0;    width: 45em;    z-index: 300;}#SampleMenu .Menu-Skin-Vertical{    position:relative;    top: 3em;    left: 0;    z-index: 300;}#SampleMenu .Menu-Skin-StaticItem{    background:#D0CEF6 url(bg_nav.gif) repeat-x;    font-size: small;}#SampleMenu .Menu-Skin-DynamicHover{    background:#7795BD;    }
