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To make it work like a submit button, use jQuery. Ideally you would want to just style the actual submit button, but you can’t use FA CSS on any type of input elements because they don’t contain content, so can’t use :before or :after. You can move this login button replacement around to get the full control of it that you need. Page layout is preserved but columns will not display and can't be edited in Word Online. Use your FontAwesome CSS on that div to get your icon in the right place. Answer SP Sky Pei MSFT Microsoft Agent Moderator Replied on SeptemReport abuse Hi Yasserbakri, Office Online provides basic feature, while Office client provide full functional feature. Make a div with a unique ID like #login-submit-block, next to your submit button in your HTML code. If you’d still like to use the FA icon button though, here’s how you could do it: That may be best, if you don’t want the extra work. Spam Sieve won’t launch from the dock for me. Hope that helps, apologies if you’ve already considered this stuff! For the best filtering accuracy, follow the instructions to do an initial training and to correct all the mistakes. Second, since you’re replacing your form submit button with something else, you’ll need to both use Javascript or jQuery to handle the onclick event so the faux button is still clickable, and will also need to provide a non-JS fallback. If you are using Apple Mail and SpamSieve does not seem to be filtering your mail, please check the Preferences Rules window in Mail and make sure that the SpamSieve rule is active (checked). You may need to use absolute positioning (on the :before pseudo-element, with relative positioning on the container) to get your icon in the right place though. You may be aware of the following points, but just in case, here are two little bits worth noting: First, some older browsers (IE8) won’t accept :after, but will accept :before, so using :before is preferable is possible. You’ll need to adjust margins a little to get it looking correct. If you change your CSS to make the icon appear in the corner of the form itself, your issue should be fixed – i.e., use #login-form:after rather than #widget-login:after. This is because it’s essentially positioned in the top-right corner of the form container. When resizing the browser after the code you’ve used above has been inserted, the login form moves to below the list of forums, but the yellow icon arrow doesn’t stay in place relative to the form. Improved the diagnostic report on macOS 13. Renamed Preferences to Settings for macOS 13. Regarding your second (more recent) question: I may not understand what you mean about poor flow, but I think I can help. When using Apple Mail, SpamSieve installs a launch agent, and this now shows up as SpamSieve rather than as C-Command Software in System Settings General Login Items Allow in the Background on macOS 13.
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