Team:Michigan/Test Css
From 2012.igem.org
(Difference between revisions)
Line 68: | Line 68: | ||
/*------------------------- Header ------------------------*/ | /*------------------------- Header ------------------------*/ | ||
- | + | .header{ | |
- | + | background:url(https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/f/fe/Michigan_Blue_Divider.png) no-repeat center 124px; | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | . | + | |
- | background:url(https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/ | + | |
width:962px; | width:962px; | ||
- | margin: | + | margin:0 auto; |
- | + | height:126px; | |
- | + | padding:0px 0px 0; | |
} | } | ||
- | . | + | .header a#logo{ |
- | + | display:block; | |
- | + | float:left; | |
- | + | outline:none; | |
} | } | ||
- | . | + | .header a#logo img{ |
- | + | border:0; | |
- | + | } | |
- | + | .header ul{ | |
- | margin:0 | + | margin:0; |
- | + | list-style:none; | |
padding:100px 0 0; | padding:100px 0 0; | ||
- | + | float:right; | |
} | } | ||
- | . | + | .header ul li{ |
- | + | float:left; | |
- | + | margin:0 0 0 36px; | |
- | + | } | |
+ | .header ul li.selected a,.header ul li a:hover{ | ||
+ | color:#f78117; | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | .header ul li a{ | ||
font-size:16px; | font-size:16px; | ||
- | + | text-decoration:none; | |
- | + | color:#5e5e5e; | |
- | + | font-family: 'RokkittRegular'; | |
- | + | outline:none; | |
} | } | ||
+ | |||
+ | /*------------------------- Body ------------------------*/ | ||
+ | |||
/*------------------------- Footer ------------------------*/ | /*------------------------- Footer ------------------------*/ |
Revision as of 02:01, 27 July 2012
Sometimes changes need to be made and with that comes a switch; and a terrible pun.
Team Michigan is engineering a novel, tightly controlled and inducible protein expression system in Escherichia coli in order to demonstrate that we can create robust boolean genetic control circuits that do not continuously rely on the presence of signaling compounds. We are using two unidirectional recombinases found in pathogenic Escherichia coli, Hbif, and FimE, to manipuulate promoter orientation.