Hi! I've come upon an interesting problem. Consider this HTML (stripped down from a real world example): <head> <style> .fc:after { content: ""; display: block; clear: both; } </style> </head> <body> <div class="fc"> <div style="float: left">main</div> </div> <div style="background:#404040; color:#ffffff">footer</div> </body> Firefox (and probably other browsers) renders black text "main" on white background above white text "footer" on dark gray background. Dillo 3.0.5 does the same, for the simple reason that it does not support floats. Dillo 3.1-dev, however, renders black text "main" and white text "footer" side by side on dark gray background, because "main" is within a float. (Which is, of course, difficult to read.) The reason why Firefox renders this as it does: the definition within <style> generates something like a block element before the text containing "footer", with "clear: both" as CSS attributes; something like: <body> <div class="fc"> <div style="float: left">main</div> </div> <div style="clear:both"></div> <div style="background:#404040; color:#ffffff">footer</div> </body> Aside from the fact that dillo has still problems with this ("footer" is too much to the right; I'll investigate this independently), this shows that dillo's limited capabilities regarding generated content, together with floats, causes some unpleasing rendering errors, which are furthermore laborious to analyse (and thus not so simple to be ignored). Has someone a feasible idea to deal with this? Sebastian