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Kaitlyn Em

Website Designing- Basic Rules for Web Designers - 0 views

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    "To help you, we've enlisted the following Rules to improve your designing: 1) The design should give an overall creative and aesthetic look, but make sure your design layout simple and uncomplicated. 2) For added professionalism, keep Flash effects to its minimum and focus more on clean HTML codes. 3) Don't forget to optimize your website titles and headers by including main keywords and phrases."
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    "To help you, we've enlisted the following Rules to improve your designing: 1) The design should give an overall creative and aesthetic look, but make sure your design layout simple and uncomplicated. 2) For added professionalism, keep Flash effects to its minimum and focus more on clean HTML codes. 3) Don't forget to optimize your website titles and headers by including main keywords and phrases."
Andrew Trott

The Trick to Designing the Perfect Layout - 0 views

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    Have you ever considered why all books and magazines have the same layout? Even when the design is different or striking, the layout remains congruous. Successful design, whether it's in publishing or on the web, will tie together all its defining elements in a way which creates an engaging user experience.
Saif Shuvo

Professional Web Design & Development Curriculum - 0 views

Lesson: 01 (Dreamweaver Basics & HTML) Introducing Dreamweaver, Elements, Attributes, Table, List, Forms, Formatting, Styles, Image, Hyperlinks. Head, Meta, Scripts, Layout, Fonts, URL- encode ...

webdesign web development

started by Saif Shuvo on 07 Jan 17 no follow-up yet
Soul Book

CSS techniques I use all the time - 0 views

  • EM calculations Sizing text is always an important part of making a usable design. I start all my CSS files with the following rules: html { font-size:100.01%; } body { font-size:1em; } The explanation for this comes from "CSS: Getting Into Good Coding Habits:" This odd 100.01% value for the font size compensates for several browser bugs. First, setting a default body font size in percent (instead of em) eliminates an IE/Win problem with growing or shrinking fonts out of proportion if they are later set in ems in other elements. Additionally, some versions of Opera will draw a default font-size of 100% too small compared to other browsers. Safari, on the other hand, has a problem with a font-size of 101%. The current "best" suggestion is to use the 100.01% value for this property.
  • I used the following calculation: 14px/16px = .875, 18px/16px = 1.125. So my default text at 1 em would translate to 16px for most users, and my small text I sized at .875em which I can trust to result in 14px for most users, while my large text I sized at 1.125em which I can trust to result in 18px
  • Safe Fluid-width Columns I work with hybrid fluid layouts all the time, usually with max-width set at anywhere from 900 to 1000px. I usually have floated columns with percentage widths, and browsers will calculate these percentage widths to whole pixel values when rendering the columns.
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  • A typical problem is the following: when a user has the viewport at a size that makes the outer container 999 pixels wide, if the first column is 60% and the second is 40%, IE 6 will always calculate the two columns as 600 and 400 pixels and as a result, the two will not fit (600+400 = 1 more than 999) and it will drop the second column. This is obviously not intended behavior, and in a world where we still have to use floats for columns (I can't wait for display:table support across all browsers), it's important to work around this problem. I used to give my last column 1 less percent (in this example, it would have 39% instead of 40%, but this would usually result in columns that don't quite fill up the container. Of late I have been giving the last column .4 less percent (in this example, 39.6%), which seems to work perfectly. Browsers will calculate this width and round up, but it will still fit even with an odd container width like 999px and I won't have to worry about dropped columns.
  • Filtering for Old Browsers To be honest, I barely support IE 6 nowadays. If there is something special about my layout that doesn't work in IE 6, I will simply filter it out of the CSS that IE 6 understands
  • Because old browsers like IE 6 don't support the "first child" selector (right caret >), I can do the following to make sure that IE 6 only gets the basic setting and all the new-fangled browsers get the right result: div#container { width:900px; } html>body div#container { width:auto; max-width:900px; } /* This overrides the previous declaration in new browsers only, IE 6 simply ignores it. */
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    Excellent simple collection of CSS tips that are easy to remember and implement. It's an old article, but i think everything is still relevant
Soul Book

The 100% Easy-2-Read Standard - 0 views

  • 1. Standard font size for long texts
  • 2. Active white space
  • The basic rule is: 10าป15 words per line. For liquid layouts, at 100% font size, 50% column width (in relation to window size) is a good benchmark for most screen resolutions.
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  • 3. Reader friendly line height
  • The default HTML line height is too small. If you increase the line height, the text becomes more readable. 140% leading is a good benchmark.
  • 4. Clear color contrast
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