﻿.foo {} /* W3C CSS validator likes CSS files to start with a class rather than a comment. Soooooo.... */

/* This style sheet is intended to contain RARELY CHANGED rules used when the Menu control adapter is enabled. */
/* These rules correspond to the "pure CSS menu" technique that have been evolving over the past several years. */ 
/* See WhitePaper.aspx for details. */

ul.AspNet-Menu 
{
    position: relative;
}


ul.AspNet-Menu, 
ul.AspNet-Menu ul
{
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
    display: block;

}

ul.AspNet-Menu li
{
    position: relative;
    list-style: none;
}

ul.AspNet-Menu li a,
ul.AspNet-Menu li span
{
    display: block;
    text-decoration: none;
}

ul.AspNet-Menu ul
{
    position: absolute;
    display: none;    
}

/* Add more rules here if your menus have more than three (3) tiers */
ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover ul ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover ul ul ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul ul ul
{
    display: none;
}

/* Add more rules here if your menus have more than three (3) tiers */
ul.AspNet-Menu li:hover ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li li:hover ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li li li:hover ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul,
ul.AspNet-Menu li li li.AspNet-Menu-Hover ul
{
    display: block;
}


/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* When the Menu control's Orientation property is Horizontal the adapter wraps the menu with DIV */
/* whose class is AspNet-Menu-Horizontal. This allows us to force the top tier of the menu to layout */
/* horizontally, whereas all subsequent tiers of the menu lay out vertically. */

.AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu li
{
    float: left;
}

.AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu li li
{
    float: none;
}


/* The menu adapter renders an unordered list (ul) in HTML for each tier in the menu. */
/* So, effectively says: style all tiers in the menu this way... */
.DefaultMenu ul { }


/* Within each menu item is a link or a span, depending on whether or not the MenuItem has defined it's */
/* NavigateUrl property. By setting a transparent background image here you can effectively layer two images */
/* in each menu item.  One comes from the CSS rule (above) governing the li tag that each menu item has. */
/* The second image comes from this rule (below). */
.DefaultMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li a,
.DefaultMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li span
{
    padding-top: 0.3em;
    padding-bottom: 0.3em;
    padding-right:20px;
    padding-left:2px;
    background: transparent url(/graphics/pil.gif) right center no-repeat;
	color:White;
	text-transform:uppercase;
	font-weight: bold;
}

/* When a menu item contains no submenu items it is marked as a "leaf" and can be styled specially by this rule. */
.DefaultMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Leaf a,
.DefaultMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li.AspNet-Menu-Leaf span
{
    background-image: none;
}


/* Not used presently.  This is here if you modify the menu adapter so it renders img tags, too. */
.DefaultMenu ul.AspNet-Menu li a img
{
    border-style: none;
    vertical-align: middle;
}

/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* When the Menu control's Orientation property is Horizontal the adapter wraps the menu with DIV */
/* whose class is AspNet-Menu-Horizontal. */
/* Note that the example menu in this web site uses absolute positioning to force the menu to occupy */
/* a specific place in the web page.  Your web site will likely use a different technique to position your */
/* menu.  So feel free to change all the properties found in this CSS rule if you clone this style sheet. */
/* There is nothing, per se, that is magical about these particular property value choices.  They happen to */
/* work well for the sample page used to demonstrate an adapted menu. */

.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal
{
    z-index: 300;
    float:right;
}

/* This rule effectively says: style all tiers EXCEPT THE TOP TIER in the menu this way... */
/* In other words, this rule can be used to style the second and third tiers of the menu without impacting */
/* the topmost tier's appearance. */
/* Remember that only the topmost tier of the menu is horizontal.  The second and third tiers are vertical. */
/* So, they need a much smaller width than the top tier.  Effectively, the width specified here is simply */
/* the width of a single menu item in the second and their tiers. */
.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul
{
    width: 172px;
    left: 0;
    top: 100%;
    border: solid 1px #BC0032;
    color:Black;
    background-color:White;
}


/* Generally, you use this rule to set style properties that pertain to all menu items. */
/* One exception is the width set here.  We will override this width with a more specific rule (below) */
/* That sets the width for all menu items from the second tier downward in the menu. */
.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu li
{
	padding-right:20px;
    white-space:nowrap;
}

/* This rule establishes the width of menu items below the top tier.  This allows the top tier menu items */
/* to be narrower, for example, than the sub-menu items. */
/* This value you set here should be slightly larger than the left margin value in the next rule. See */
/* its comment for more details. */
.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul li
{
    text-align:left;
    width: 170px;
    background:white;    
    padding:0px;
}
.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul li a,
.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu ul li span
{  
    color:Black;
    text-transform:none;
    font-weight: normal;
}

/* Third tier menus have to be positioned differently than second (or top) tier menu items because */
/* they drop to the side, not below, their parent menu item. This is done by setting the last margin */
/* value (which is equal to margin-left) to a value that is slightly smaller than the WIDTH of the */
/* menu item. So, if you modify the rule above, then you should modify this (below) rule, too. */
.DefaultMenu .AspNet-Menu-Horizontal ul.AspNet-Menu li ul li ul
{
    margin: -1.95em 0 0 170px;
    padding:0px;
}


#menudiv
{
	width: 880px;
	background-color: #BC0032;
	color: #FFFFFF;
	margin: 0px;
	height:24px;
	cursor:pointer;
}
#nav-access
{
	display:none;
}