At some point, you may have a situation where you want to center multiple elements (maybe <div> elements, or other block elements) on a single line in a fixed-width area. Centering a single element in a fixed area is easy. Just add margin: auto and a fixed width to the element you want to center, and the margins will force the element to center. There really should be a similar simple way to center multiple elements evenly spaced. It would be nice if CSS had a property called box-align which you could set to center then the child elements would be centered evenly within their parent. Well, you can achieve something similar by taking advantage of CSS's flexibity with recasting elements (for lack of a better term).
“You can never have enough screen real-estate! And no, this is not Steve Ballmer’s office.”
“I do not tell people what to do so do not compare me with Al Gore either!”
Are you looking for this multi-monitor home office setup?
The development of the Internet in recent years has made it possible and useful to access many different information systems anywhere in the world to obtain information. While there is much research on the integration of heterogeneous information systems, most commercial systems stop short of the actual integration of available data. Data fusion is the process of fusing multiple records representing the same real-world object into a single, consistent, and clean representation.
Imagine you have hundreds (or even thousands) of webpage URLs that you want to upload to your del.icio.us account. How would do this bulk submit when the delicious system allows you to bookmark web pages one at a time ?