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Bulletproof Web Design: Improving flexibility and protecting against worst-case scenarios with XHTML and CSS


book cover
Bulletproof Web Design: Improving flexibility and protecting against worst-case scenarios with XHTML and CSS
By Dan Cederholm
...............................................
Publisher: Peachpit Press
Pub Date: July 28, 2005
ISBN: 0-321-34693-9
Pages: 280
 



Table of Contents   Index
overview

No matter how visually appealing or packed with content your Web site is, it isn't succeeding if it's not reaching the widest possible audience. If you get this guide, you can be assured it will! By deconstructing a series of real-world Web sites, author and Web designer extraordinaire Dan Cederholm outlines 10 strategies for creating standards-based designs that provide flexibility, readability, and user controlkey components of every successful Web site. Each chapter starts out with an example of what Dan refers to as an "unbulletproof" conceptan existing site that employs a traditional approach and its associated pitfalls. Dan then deconstructs that approach, noting its downsides and then making the site over using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). By the end of each chapter, you'll have replaced traditional, bloated, inaccessible page components with lean markup and CSS. The guide culminates with a chapter that pieces together all of the page components discussed in prior chapters into a single page template.



book cover
Bulletproof Web Design: Improving flexibility and protecting against worst-case scenarios with XHTML and CSS
By Dan Cederholm
...............................................
Publisher: Peachpit Press
Pub Date: July 28, 2005
ISBN: 0-321-34693-9
Pages: 280
 



Table of Contents   Index

    Copyright
    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    Introduction
      THE BULLETPROOF CONCEPT
      WHY IT'S IMPORTANT
      THE BOOK'S STRUCTURE
      THE CONTEXT OF THE BOOK'S EXAMPLES
      COMMON TERMS USED THROUGHOUT THE BOOK
    Chapter 1.  Flexible Text
      A Common Approach
      Weighing Our Options
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      A Flexible Base. Now What?
      Working With Keywords and Percentages
      Summary
    Chapter 2.  Scalable Navigation
      A Common Approach
      Why It's Not Bulletproof
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      Additional Examples
      Summary
    Chapter 3.  Expandable Rows
      A Common Approach
      Why It's Not Bulletproof
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      Another Example of Expanding
      Summary
    Chapter 4.  Creative Floating
      A Common Approach
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      Summary
    Chapter 5.  Indestructible Boxes
      A Common Approach
      Why It's Not Bulletproof
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      Other Rounded-Corner Techniques
      Summary
    Chapter 6.  No Images? No CSS? No Problem
      A Common Approach
      Why It's Not Bulletproof
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      With or Without Style
      Bulletproof Tools
      Summary
    Chapter 7.  Convertible Tables
      A Common Approach
      Why It's Not Bulletproof
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      Summary
    Chapter 8.  Fluid Layouts
      A Common Approach
      Why It's Not Bulletproof
      A Bulletproof Approach
      Why It's Bulletproof
      Summary
    Chapter 9.  Putting It All Together
      The Goal
      Why It's Bulletproof
      The Construction
      CSS Adjustments for IE
      Conclusion
    Index