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Gt;Page Layout

Gt;Page Layout
About the CSS Layout Generator The CSS Layout Generator was first released by Tony Aslett in October 2003, since then over 871,000 layouts have been generated. Updated in November 2010, HTML5 doctype can now be selected and a simple HTML5 template with appropriate tags will be created. The generator helps you create the structure of your website template using valid HTML and CSS. You can create a fluid or fixed width floated column layout, with up to 3 columns and with header and footer. The generator requires a modern DOM capable browser with JavaScript enabled. Instructions To create your layout select the structural elements your site requires (header, footer, columns). Info popups are available where you see InfoMore info example :) icon, just hover over it for more information. Join the CSS Forum to suggest changes or ask for help where needed. Author: Tony Aslett

Paint.NET - Free Software for Digital Photo Editing XOOPS is developed by you! : XOOPS Module Switchy McLayout: An Adaptive Layout Technique CSS-based liquid layout has proven successful during the reign of 800-pixel to 1024-pixel screens, but as we use a wider range of devices to access the web, we need more powerful and flexible ways of managing layout. If we want to serve devices whose viewports range from 240 pixels to about 1680 pixels—and with resolution ranging from 72 to 150 pixels per inch—we need a new method. What’s the problem with liquid layouts?#section1 If you create a liquid layout optimized for a maximum width of 1024 pixels—limiting maximum line-lengths for your text to maintain readability— gaps will appear on a wider screens, and your carefully balanced layout will break. So why don’t we just define layout and appearance for a series of screen-width ranges, then find a way to match these layouts with the user’s viewport size? Switchy McLayout to the rescue#section2 Switchy McLayout lets you define the dimensions, information richness, and appearance of your content objects for set ranges of screen sizes.

css-edge Please note that none of the demonstrations in css/edge are intended to work in Navigator 4.x. I say this not to denigrate that browser, but instead to spare you any frustration you might otherwise feel. This site exists to explore the cutting edge of HTML+CSS design, and Navigator 4.x is, at four years and counting, just too old to keep up with most things that will be done here. Again, there's nothing wrong with Navigator 4.x, but you probably don't want to use it in this area. Consider it a friendly warning. Welcome to the edge What is this? Expanding our horizons For the last seven years, we've been pushing Web design further and further down the same path. Like tables, there is another highly limiting structure that's composed of rows and cells: a prison. css/edge is intended, first and foremost, to be as relentlessly creative with CSS as we have been practical all these years. Inclusion Criteria Copyright

DesignFloat - Web Design News & Tips The Man in Blue > Code & Beauty 21 January 2013 It's been a while since I did a house music DJ mix, so I thought I'd put together some tunes that I'm feeling at the start of 2013. This one starts off deep, goes vocal and ends on a blissful high, so take a listen, or download all 50 minutes as an MP3 ... continued Popular Entries Articles Elsewhere Go Forth and API An article written for Vitamin promoting the use of Web APIs with JavaScript/AJAX, including some server-side proxying techniques and code snippets. You want to be a dinosaur? An article promoting Web Standards to the primarily Flash-oriented audience of the Favourite Website Awards. Press 35 Designers x 5 Qs Smashing Magazine asked the same 5 questions to 35 designers. By the Book John Lampard interviewed me about The JavaScript Anthology for OnVoiceOver – a series on Australian creatives. Links Puppy Tales - a site for dogs My wife's new blog and online store for dogs has launched! View older links

Sliding Doors of CSS: A List Apart A rarely discussed advantage of CSS is the ability to layer background images, allowing them to slide over each other to create certain effects. CSS2’s current state requires a separate HTML element for each background image. In many cases, typical markup for common interface components has already provided several elements for our use. Article Continues Below One of those cases is tabbed navigation. What if we could take the exact same markup from the tabs above, and turn them into something like this: With simple styling, we can. Where’s the Innovation? Many of the CSS-based tabs I’ve seen suffer from the same generic features: blocky rectangles of color, maybe an outline, a border disappears for the current tab, a color changes for the hover state. Prior to a more widespread adoption of CSS, we started seeing a lot of innovation in navigation design. Pure text navigation is much easier to maintain and loads more quickly than text-as-image navigation. Tab Creation#creation

The Definitive Guide to Using Negative Margins | CSS Advertisement Since the recommendation of CSS2 back in 1998, the use of tables has slowly faded into the background and into the history books. Because of this, CSS layouts have since then been synonymous with coding elegance. Out of all the CSS concepts designers have ever used, an award probably needs to be given to the use of Negative Margins as being the most least talked about method of positioning. It’s like an online taboo—everyone’s doing it, yet no one wants to talk about it. 1. We all use margins in our CSS, but when it comes to negative margins, our relationship somehow manages to take a turn for the worse. A negative margin looks like this: Negative margins are usually applied in small doses but as you’ll see later on, it’s capable of so much more. They are extremely valid CSSI’m not kidding on this one. 2. Negative margins are very powerful when used correctly. Negative Margins on Static Elements A static element is an element with no float applied. 3. Smashing 3D text effects

Feuilles de style en cascade, niveau 2 Recommandation du W3C du 12 mai 1998 Cette version : Dernière version : Version précédente : Rédacteurs : Bert Bos <bbos@w3.org>Håkon Wium Lie <howcome@w3.org>Chris Lilley <chris@w3.org>Ian Jacobs <ij@w3.org> Résumé Cette spécification définit CSS2 : les feuilles de style en cascade, niveau 2. CSS2 est construit sur CSS1 (voir [CSS1]), ainsi toute feuille de style valide en CSS1 est également valide en CSS2 à très peu d'exceptions près. Statut de ce document Ce document a été vérifié par les membres du W3C et d'autres parties intéressées et le Directeur l'a approuvé comme Recommandation du W3C. Une liste des Recommandations actuelles du W3C et d'autres documents techniques peut être trouvée à Les discussions publiques sur les fonctions de CSS ont lieu sur la liste www-style@w3.org. Formats disponibles Langues disponibles

Les traductions des recommandations du W3C hébergées sur ce site English documents Les traductions de documents du W3C Préambule Cette page liste les traductions de rapports techniques du W3C publiées ici. Ce ne sont pas des versions françaises agréées : seuls les documents originaux en anglais font autorité. Mise en garde Les documents du W3C peuvent recéler des erreurs. La liste des traductions publiées ici Les profils composites de capacités/préférences (CC/PP) : structure et vocabulaires 1.0 Un modèle de caractères pour le Web 1.0 : Les principes de base Les problèmes courants dans l'implémentation de HTTP CoolUris Adresses URI sympas pour le Web sémantique Les feuilles de style en cascade niveau 1 Les feuilles de style en cascade, niveau 2 Les problèmes courants des agents utilisateurs Di-Gloss-20030825 Un glossaire des termes de l'indépendance par rapport aux appareils DOM2-Core La spécification du modèle objet de document (DOM) niveau 2 Core DOM2-Events La spécification du modèle objet de document (DOM) niveau 2 Events DOM2-Style DOM2-Traversal-Range DOM2-Views

Openweb.eu.org - Le XHTML Intégration web, les bonnes pratiques Une fois n’est pas coutume, nous reproduisons ici la préface du livre « Intégration Web, les bonnes pratiques » avec l’accord de l’auteure Corinne Schillinger. Cette préface a été écrite par deux de nos membres, à savoir Élie Sloim et Laurent Denis. Nous ne saurions que trop vous recommander de lire cet excellent ouvrage, ainsi que de savourer toute l’essence et l’évolution du métier de développeur front-end que cette préface relate. HTML Media Capture Parmi les nombreuses nouvelles API d’HTML5, une en particulier est particulièrement simple à mettre en place et permet des choses plutôt sympathiques : HTML Media Capture. Mieux comprendre l’écosystème autour du développement de HTML Plusieurs annonces à propos d’HTML5 ont été relayées et ont semé le trouble ainsi qu’une certaine inquiétude dans l’écosystème du Web et même dans les médias classiques. De l’intégrateur au développeur front-end : un maillon essentiel de la qualité Web

CSS Design: Taming Lists: A List Apart As early as July of 1999 I was pontificating on email lists about the virtues of style sheets. Some things never change. Article Continues Below What has changed is how I think about CSS, and the underlying structure of (X)HTML to which it is applied. For example, I find that most pages on the web contain a menu of links in a navigation area. Of course the reason that we don’t mark them up in that way is that we don’t want a bullet in front of every link in our navigation area. In this article, I’ll demonstrate how to use CSS to bring unwieldy lists under control. Setting the stage#section2 For purposes of this article, I am using unordered lists. <ul><li>Item 1</li><li>Item 2</li><li>Item 3</li><li>Item 4</li><li>Item 5 we'll make a bit longer so that it will wrap</li></ul> Each list is simply placed inside a different DIV, and the CSS is written so that the list’s behavior is determined by the DIV it is in. Item 1Item 2Item 3Item 4Item 5 we’ll make a bit longer so that it will wrap

Character entity references in HTML 4 24.1 Introduction to character entity references A character entity reference is an SGML construct that references a character of the document character set. This version of HTML supports several sets of character entity references: ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) characters In accordance with section 14 of [RFC1866], the set of Latin-1 entities has been extended by this specification to cover the whole right part of ISO-8859-1 (all code positions with the high-order bit set), including the already commonly used &nbsp;, &copy; and &reg;. The names of the entities are taken from the appendices of SGML (defined in [ISO8879]). symbols, mathematical symbols, and Greek letters. These characters may be represented by glyphs in the Adobe font "Symbol". markup-significant and internationalization characters (e.g., for bidirectional text). The following sections present the complete lists of character entity references. 24.2 Character entity references for ISO 8859-1 characters 24.2.1 The list of characters <!

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