Students in Bill Wolff's course, Writing, Research, and Technology, share CSS and Photoshop tips, tricks, and hacks. Two commented bookmarks required per week per student.
"Faux Columns" by Dan Cederholm of SimpleBits discusses "[a] simple way to make CSS columns appear equal in length, regardless of the content that they contain." This technique requires a good amount of skill in positioning elements on a page and understanding the nuances of the background image.Found at: Zeldman and A List Apart
I'd like to try it, but don't anticipate using it any time in the near future.
"Faux Columns" by Dan Cederholm of SimpleBits discusses "[a] simple way to make CSS columns appear equal in length, regardless of the content that they contain." This technique requires a good amount of skill in positioning elements on a page and understanding the nuances of the background image.
Found at: Zeldman and A List Apart
I'd like to try it, but don't anticipate using it any time in the near future.
thought this site would be helpful when creating tables and various other properties that we do not already know how to do and need a little extra time researching!
This website is from our Photoshop book and sends us to a link where some renowned authors bring their tips and tricks directly to your desktop. It talks about integrating adobe bridge, fixing color, and much more. There are live podcasts, audio and video, which take the user through steps of specific Photoshop activities.
It's really neat how this web designer used CSS to create an American flag that links to all 50 states. I'm satisfied when I get a working toolbar! Click the video link to see how the page works.
This website gives simple instructions, coding and tips for making really cool backgrounds very easily. It even gives some free backgrounds you can use.
This is a quick cheat sheet for HTML codes for paragraphs, page breaks, headings, centering, etc. For beginners this is a great reference tool for the very basics of coding.
This website gives an endless amount of photos for any type of usage. It's great for downloading pictures and altering them in Photoshop or Picnik. Also, they can be used on websites.
This site explains way to condense CSS code while still maintaining the same results (although I'd recommend trying it out before making that assumption). I'm still learning the ropes of CSS, but from what I understand the less code, the better.
This article will make us feel better about doing our coding by hand......to the article's credit, the author does explain how to overcome these issues. But is it worth it? You decide.