Prev | Current Page 37 | Next

Craig Grannell

"The Essential Guide to CSS and HTML Web Design"

This highly
modular and integrated approach means that you can dip in and out of the book as you
need to, crafting along the way a number of web page elements that you can use on countless
sites in the future.
Because the entire skills gamut is covered??”from foundation to advanced??”this book is ideal
for beginners and long-time professionals alike. If you??™re making your first move into standards-
based web design, the ???ground floor??? is covered, rather than an assumption being
made regarding your knowledge. However, contemporary ideas, techniques, and thinking are
explored throughout, ensuring that the book is just as essential for the experienced designer
wanting to work on CSS layouts, or the graphic designer who wants to discover how to create
cutting-edge websites.
This book??™s advocacy of web standards, usability, and accessibility with a strong eye toward
visual design makes it of use to technologists and designers alike, enabling everyone to build
better websites. An entire chapter is devoted to browser issues, which should help ensure
your sites look great, regardless of the end user??™s setup. And for those moments when a
xxiii
4e39d27715ea33bfeed83c26800166a2
particular tag or property value slips your mind, this book provides a comprehensive reference
guide that includes important and relevant XHTML elements and attributes, XHTML
entities, web colors, and CSS 2.1 properties and values.
Remember that you can visit the friends of ED support forums at www.


Pages:
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49