Skip to main content

Home/ CSS Evangelist/ Group items tagged HTML-CSS

Rss Feed Group items tagged

mikhail-miguel

13styles.com :: Navigation menus online - 0 views

  • Saturday   Photoshop template included for color customization. Pre-built in light green/auburn. Dolphin   Photoshop template included for color customization. Pre-built in blue. Fox   Photoshop template included for color customization. Pre-built in red. Background color controlled in css. Slate   Photoshop template included for color customization. Pre-built in red, blue, green and purple. Wax   Photoshop template included for color customization. Pre-built in blue, orange, red, green and grey. Style #1 Photoshop template not included. Pre-built in grey/blue. Style #2 Photoshop template not included. Pre-built in grey/blue. Style #4 Photoshop template not included. Pre-built in red/grey. Top red line controlled via CSS. Style #5 Photoshop template not included. Pre-built in dark blue. Bottom pink-ish line controlled nia CSS.    
Mr. DiGi

Beautiful and Simple CSS Button Styling - 8 views

  • Particletree CSS Button Style
  • Scalable CSS Buttons Using PNG and Background Colors
  • Woork CSS buttons with icon set
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Liquid & Color Adjustable CSS Buttons When working on a large site with multiple buttons, it can be quite tedious to make all the buttons in Photoshop. Making future adjustments on the verbiage and colors can be also be time consuming.
  • Styling the Button Element with CSS Sliding Doors
  • Bold CSS Buttons
  • Pure CSS Buttons
  • Roll Over Button
mikhail-miguel

37 navigation techniques - 0 views

  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Hybrid CSS Dropdowns Photo Matt Intelligent Menus Inverted Sliding Doors Tab // 456bereastreet.com Accessible Image-Tab Rollovers // Simplebits Simplebits Mini-Tabs Simplified CSS Tabs // Simplebits Tabtastic
helloe

PingMag - The Tokyo-based magazine about "Design and Making Things" » Archive... - 7 views

  • Writing CSS is very much like having sex. Not everyone does it the same way and there is no particular “right” way to do it. I guess for me the similarities actually end there, seeing as writing CSS is something I do every day whereas having sex is…anyway I digress. The W3C have set the standards but beyond this, writing CSS is down to an individual’s preferences. Here are 5 little tips and ideas I’ve adopted in the last 6 months that you can use to make your CSS more streamlined, maintainable and easy to read. Written by Jon Disclaimer: The CSS example files are exactly that. They are not meant to be fully functional CSS documents. Class names in the CSS files are named merely so that you may visualise the document in your head (because there is no accompanying html), not because I condone the naming convention in them.
  • 1) Make a table of contents At the top of your CSS document, write out a table of contents. For example, you could outline the different areas that your CSS document is styling (header, main, footer etc). Then, use a large, obvious section break to separate the areas. Not only does this make your CSS look neater, but when it comes to making quick adjustments to certain areas of your website at a later date, finding the corresponding area in your CSS will be much easier. View Example File 1
  • 3) Isolate single properties that you are likely to reuse a lot If you find yourself using a single property a lot, isolate it to save yourself repeating it over and over again and also enabling you to change the display of all parts of the site that use it. View Example File 3
kie guy

100+ Massive CSS Toolbox | tripwire magazine - 0 views

  •  
    100+ CSS Tool box including layout/menu generators and more
  •  
    CSS Cheat Sheets CSS Need to know Stuff CSS Tutorials CSS Layout Tools CSS Navigation and Menus Tools Other CSS Tools CSS Web Designs
ronzuo

OverZone Software - CSS Tab Designer - 0 views

  • With the CSS Tab Designer, you can : Quickly design your list visually Choose from a variety of styles/colors (60+ different designs/colors supported). [ Styles Authors / Credits ] Generate strict xhtml compliant code  
Frederik Van Zande

CSS Transitions via jQuery Animations | Weston Ruter - 1 views

  •  
    The WebKit team has been developing some cutting-edge proposals to extend CSS with the ability to do declarative animations and other effects. This ability is key to maintaining the three-fold separation of HTML content, CSS presentation, and JavaScript behavior. Animation effects on the Web today are accomplished with JavaScript code which repeatedly changes an element's style at a certain interval in order to create an animated effect. This practice, however, violates the separation between presentation and behavior because the animation behaviors are directly changing the document's presentation (i.e. modifying the style property). Ideally, all of the animation triggers and presentation states would be declared in CSS. And this is exactly what the WebKit team has proposed in its CSS Transitions specification.
Scott Hendrickson

A List Apart: Articles: Frameworks for Designers - 0 views

  • How should a CSS framework be built? There are several possible ways to go about building a framework, but the most common and arguably the most useful is to abstract your common CSS into individual stylesheets that each cover a particular part of the whole. For example, you may have a stylesheet that sets up the typography and another that handles the mass reset. The beauty of the approach is the ability to selectively include only the styles that you need. You may end up with six or seven different stylesheets in your framework, but if a particular project doesn’t need one or two of them, they don’t have to be included. The framework we created in our office has five stylesheets: reset.css—handles the mass reset. type.css—handles the typography. grid.css—handles the layout grid. widgets.css—handles widgets like tabs, drop-down menus, and “read more” buttons. base.css—includes all the other stylesheets, so that we only need to call base.css from our (X)HTML documents to use the entire framework.
  • A word of caution This method works quite well, but there is a valid concern to be raised: it adds to the number of HTTP connections needed to render each page. On large, high-traffic sites, adding five more HTTP connections to every page view may result in angry system administrators. Two possible solutions to this are: Include everything in a single file, rather than breaking it into modules. The problem here is that you lose the ability to include only certain parts of the framework, and you also make maintenance more difficult. Have a server-side process that dynamically flattens the individual files into a single response. I’ve not seen this done, but it could be very efficient if done well. Using my example framework above, this dynamic process could occur when base.css is requested, but not when type.css, grids.css, etc. are. This way, the individual components are still available, but the entire framework is available in a flattened version, as well.
anonymous

13 Awesome Javascript CSS Menus - 0 views

  • 13 Awesome Javascript CSS Menus Posted in: Ajax, Javascript, CSS 31 Comments, Add a Response
Gary Edwards

Everything You Know About CSS Is Wrong | Digital Web Magazine: Rachel Andrew - 0 views

  •  
    The easy way to use CSS2.1 to solve difficult cross-browser layout issues: CSS tables solve all the problems encountered when using absolute positioning or floats to create multi-column layouts in modern browsers. Specifying the value table for the display property of an element allows you to display the element and its descendants as though they're table elements. The main benefit of CSS table-based layouts is the ability to easily define the boundaries of a cell so that we can add backgrounds and so on to it-without the semantic problems of marking up non-tabular content as a HTML table in the document.
wen071

CSSElite CSS Gallery - css gallery, website design gallery, web design resources, css d... - 0 views

shared by wen071 on 19 Feb 07 - Cached
  • AJ Miles (0) Bluebolt (0) Pro Landscape (0) OhYouPrettyThings (0) SUM Agency (0) Igoo (0) Young Go Getter (0) Future of Web Apps (0)
Gary Edwards

Construct Your CSS | WYSIWYG Layout Editor, Semantic & Table-Free | Based on Blueprint ... - 0 views

  •  
    Construct is a visual layout editor based on Blueprint & jQuery! This is version 0.5, last updated on April 27, 2008. This project was built by Christian Montoya, and exists both as a useful tool for CSS designers and as proof that a visual layout editor is possible to acheive with clean CSS & semantic HTML.
Uzair Ahmed

CSS HTML Converter / Stuff / Andy Langton's Website - 0 views

  •  
    Convert between CSS and HTML instantly, or create new CSS styles with this handy online tool.
Frederik Van Zande

How to get Cross Browser Compatibility Every Time | Anthony Short | Web Design & Develo... - 0 views

  • Here is a quick summary for those of you who don't want to read the whole article: Always use strict doctype and standards-compliant HTML/CSS Always use a reset at the start of your css Use opacity:0.99 on text elements to clean up rendering in Safari Never resize images in the CSS or HTML Check font rendering in every browser. Don't use Lucida Size text as a % in the body, and as em's throughout All layout divs that are floated should include display:inline and overflow:hidden Containers should have overflow:auto and trigger hasLayout via a width or height Don't use any fancy CSS3 selectors Don't use transparent PNG's unless you have loaded the alpha
  •  
    Cross-browser compatibility is one of the most time consuming tasks for any web designer. We've seen many different articles over the net describing common problems and fixes. I've collated all the information I could find to create some coding conventions for ensuring that your site will work first time in every browser. There are some things you should consider for Safari and Firefox also, and IE isn't always the culprit for your CSS woes.
kie guy

NealGrosskopf.com l CSS Template Layouts: A Simpler CSS Layout System, Now Possible Wit... - 1 views

  •  
    A new layout system to replace floats or display:table or html tables. Based on the W3C's proposed 'CSS Template Layout Module' for CSS3; but using jquery to take advantage of this technique today.
anonymous

CSS Dock Menu - 0 views

  • If you are a big Mac fan, you will love this CSS dock menu that I designed. It is using Jquery Javascript library and Fisheye component from Interface and some of my icons. It comes with two dock styles - top and bottom. This CSS dock menu is perfert to add on to my iTheme. Here I will show you how to implement it to your web page.
Alberto Adrián Schiano

JS Bin - Collaborative JavaScript Debugging - 1 views

  •  
    specifically designed to help JavaScript and CSS folk test snippets of code, within some context, and debug the code collaboratively. JS Bin allows you to edit and test JavaScript and HTML (reloading the URL also maintains the state of your code - new tabs doesn't). Once you're happy you can save, and send the URL to a peer for review or help. They can then make further changes saving anew if required.
  •  
    Edit, test, visualice HTML5, CSS & JS on-line in a sandbox Editar,probar, visualizar HTML5, CSS & JS on-line en un arenero
mikhail-miguel

Can I use... Support tables for HTML5, CSS3, etc - 6 views

Frederik Van Zande

Hackszine.com: Easiest cross-browser CSS min-height - 0 views

  •  
    Enforcing a minimum height for block elements in HTML is one of those few CSS tricks that you can't live without. There are still enough folks using IE6, unfortunately, and it doesn't support the min-height or min-width CSS parameters. This has caused the invention of a number of different hacks and browser-conditional style sheets to get the desired effect.
yc c

Image to CSS Converter - 0 views

  •  
    This is the direct link from http://elliottback.com/wp/archives/2005/04/25/convert-image-to-css/
     Convert Image to CSS
    Posted in Code, Plugins, Graphics by Elliott Back on April 25th, 2005. [Del.icio.us]

    Ever wanted to take an image and convert it, pixel by pixel, into CSS, HTML, or xHTML? Well, now you can, thanks to my handy conversion tool! Just give it the URL of the image to convert, select a pixel resampling ratio, a mode, and off you go. You can also save the html. Just right click on the permalink and "save target as" to your favorite location.

        * Example: Born into Brothels [via]
        * Example: Cambridge, England [via]
        * Massive deforestation [via]

    Note: If you give a very large image, with a very small pixel ratio, the image could take a long time to load, or eventually overload your browser with multiple megabytes of web information. These "images" are very large!


1 - 20 of 387 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page