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clariene Austria

Online Lead Generation can Save You Thousands! - 3 views

Having a good online lead generation site can be the difference between a thriving business and one that just struggles to get by. By now you probably tried cold calling, buying leads, email outs, ...

started by clariene Austria on 21 Jun 12 no follow-up yet
Vernon Fowler

bjankord/Style-Guide-Boilerplate - 0 views

  • I recommend creating a directory named style-guide in your site's root directory. I think it would be awesome if I could go to anysite.com/style-guide/ and check out that site's style guide.
  • Below the custom styles for the boilerplate, you will add in your own custom stylesheet(s) which you use on your live site.
  • You should be able to go to yoursite.com/style-guide/ and see how your live site's CSS affects base elements.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • To create custom patterns like buttons, breadcrumbs, alert messages, etc., create a new .html file and add your HTML markup into the file. Save the file as pattern-name.html into the markup/patterns directory inside of your style-guide directory.
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
software supprt

Software Support Saved My Spring Days - 2 views

Last spring, I was having trouble with a recurrent problem from a software I installed on my PC. It keeps on displaying errors on the screen which really got me ticked off. After 2 weeks of putting...

software support

started by software supprt on 03 Aug 11 no follow-up yet
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