diff --git a/curriculum/challenges/english/01-responsive-web-design/applied-visual-design/move-a-relatively-positioned-element-with-css-offsets.md b/curriculum/challenges/english/01-responsive-web-design/applied-visual-design/move-a-relatively-positioned-element-with-css-offsets.md index 1ebc81473a..233713adda 100644 --- a/curriculum/challenges/english/01-responsive-web-design/applied-visual-design/move-a-relatively-positioned-element-with-css-offsets.md +++ b/curriculum/challenges/english/01-responsive-web-design/applied-visual-design/move-a-relatively-positioned-element-with-css-offsets.md @@ -11,8 +11,6 @@ dashedName: move-a-relatively-positioned-element-with-css-offsets The CSS offsets of `top` or `bottom`, and `left` or `right` tell the browser how far to offset an item relative to where it would sit in the normal flow of the document. You're offsetting an element away from a given spot, which moves the element away from the referenced side (effectively, the opposite direction). As you saw in the last challenge, using the `top` offset moved the `h2` downwards. Likewise, using a `left` offset moves an item to the right. - - # --instructions-- Use CSS offsets to move the `h2` 15 pixels to the right and 10 pixels up.