It doesn't make thousands of assumptions except that you need to understand HTML basics. Almost every example still works in current browsers (IE). But things are really hit or miss with AOL (Netscape) products. Netscape browsers new and old, current and past have only erratically supported CSS.
Nobody offers complete "standard" CSS support anyway and probably never will, as XSL and follow-on technologies may or may not obsolete CSS someday.
At least this describes "real world" CSS and introduces it somewhat gently.
I was once a big Webmonkey fan myself, but man I sure find their format tedious for ever going back and finding something. They always seem to drift so far off track in their articles, and their search engine seems to cough up pretty useless results too.
There is good material there, it just needs a radical attempt at organization along with a rewrite of nearly every article.
But it can be great for rank beginners with a lot of time on their hands.
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