Hmmmm. That would allow you as many variations on your page layout as you have tags (and I have about 200 of them, give or take a handful, so this could get really crazy fast). But I do like the idea. But not enough to see it implemented as a variation on mine - at least, not yet. For someone who wants a cohesive look to their DW it's probably overkill, but for designers really wanting to head way far out there in their designs, it does sound great.
My whole reason for the suggestion is my tagged views are not conforming to each other because they have to follow .page-recent's CSS, a page which I have set up to work with the Previous and Next links up top (and that page *always* has Previous and Next links, so it always works).
But on some of my tagged views, there are not enough entries to spawn those nav links, so the top of the page doesn't line up right (perfect example being the link I used for my OP, http://marahmarie.dreamwidth.org/tag/book+reviews. If things were lined up right on that particular tag view, the hr line under the first sidebar title and the hr line under the top entry would sit right across from each other, perfectly. Like so: http://marahmarie.dreamwidth.org/101800.html).
But because the page is following .page-recent's CSS, I can't use my special CSS rules for .page-entry and .page-reply to fix that mess up. Thus, my Suggestion was born.
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My whole reason for the suggestion is my tagged views are not conforming to each other because they have to follow .page-recent's CSS, a page which I have set up to work with the Previous and Next links up top (and that page *always* has Previous and Next links, so it always works).
But on some of my tagged views, there are not enough entries to spawn those nav links, so the top of the page doesn't line up right (perfect example being the link I used for my OP, http://marahmarie.dreamwidth.org/tag/book+reviews. If things were lined up right on that particular tag view, the hr line under the first sidebar title and the hr line under the top entry would sit right across from each other, perfectly. Like so: http://marahmarie.dreamwidth.org/101800.html).
But because the page is following .page-recent's CSS, I can't use my special CSS rules for .page-entry and .page-reply to fix that mess up. Thus, my Suggestion was born.