Amaury Well-known member Feb 18, 2014 #1 Per this post of mine, I'm interested in doing this for all the style I release on here. How can it be accomplished? I want to do what Misty did for her IPBForo style here, in other words (see the easy to customize part). Last edited: Feb 18, 2014
Per this post of mine, I'm interested in doing this for all the style I release on here. How can it be accomplished? I want to do what Misty did for her IPBForo style here, in other words (see the easy to customize part).
Russ Well-known member Feb 18, 2014 #2 You can take a look here, he mentions one method of doing it. http://xenforo.com/community/resour...beginners-best-practices-tips-and-tricks.975/ Upvote 0 Downvote
You can take a look here, he mentions one method of doing it. http://xenforo.com/community/resour...beginners-best-practices-tips-and-tricks.975/
Amaury Well-known member Feb 18, 2014 #3 Russ said: You can take a look here, he mentions one method of doing it. http://xenforo.com/community/resour...beginners-best-practices-tips-and-tricks.975/ Click to expand... That kind of overcomplicated things, but I think I figured it out. I know that the EXTRA.css template is called from the public.css template, so would this be correct (the second template line)? Code: </xen:if> <xen:include template="EXTRA.css" /> <xen:include template="valentine's_day.css" /> But I first would create a template called that, right? Upvote 0 Downvote
Russ said: You can take a look here, he mentions one method of doing it. http://xenforo.com/community/resour...beginners-best-practices-tips-and-tricks.975/ Click to expand... That kind of overcomplicated things, but I think I figured it out. I know that the EXTRA.css template is called from the public.css template, so would this be correct (the second template line)? Code: </xen:if> <xen:include template="EXTRA.css" /> <xen:include template="valentine's_day.css" /> But I first would create a template called that, right?