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Hows_Your_Sense_of_Style
| Hows Your Sense of Style?
No, I'm not referring to your wardrobe here, but to cascading
style sheets, also known as CSS. Developed by the World Wide Web
Consortium, it allows webmasters to separate site layout from
the design. CSS is actually a standard for controlling the
appearance of your Web pages. It's essentially a set of rules
that, when linked to or embedded in HTML pages, control their
appearance.
Right about now you're probably thinking "What's so great about
that?" The benefits are numerous -- two of the biggest are:
1) Easy Site Updates: Global site updates will be simpler when
you can make all your changes in one place to update the entire
site. It's much better than going through page after page of
HTML code. For example, say you have a site made in Times New
Roman font and your customer calls you up and tells you he wants
Verdana. Can you imagine scrolling through 25 pages or more
looking for every incident of the tag and changing it to
Verdana? What a nightmare. With CSS you would simply specify the
font in one location and the change would be implemented site
wide.
2) Faster Loading: Your HTML pages will load faster due to
cleaner code. All of the extraneous coding will be in a style
sheet, leaving less clutter and faster downloading of the site.
So now that you've seen a few of the "benes" to style sheets,
let's learn more about them. Let's clarify up front that while
both Netscape and Internet Explorer both support CSS from
version 4.0 and higher, they don't exactly see eye to eye on CSS
and interpret some style properties differently. You'll want to
test your pages in both browsers to check and correct any
inconsistencies.
So what can you control with CSS? Things like paragraphs
, Headings , borders, table layouts,Fonts and font
colors, text alignment, pixel size, line height, letter spacing,
word spacing, font weights, page margins, and even background
images; and the way they work is a big improvement over just
plain old HTML. Are you beginning to see the possibilities and
just how powerful this can be?
There are three ways to use CSS:
1) Inline: The CSS tags are applied to the web page itself, to
any body element you choose. This is not the best method, as
you'll have to find each incidence in the web site in order to
make changes in the future.
Example of this:
Text Here In the
example above the text would be highlighted yellow.
2) Embedded: The actual CSS code is part of the HTML page placed
between the tags on each page. Again, placing the tags
inside the pages defeats the convenience of CSS and being able
to make global site changes from one document, but some do like
to use this method.
Example of embedded:
H2 {font-size:small}
3) Linked: In my opinion, the best method to use. You place a
link to the CSS between the tags on your web
pages. The link looks like this:
The style sheet is a separate text document that is saved with a
.css extension like this: style.css.
So now that you know your three options for using CSS, how do
you write the code? Every style sheet rule starts with a
selector followed by braces. A selector is any part of HTML
coding like P, Font, Body, etc.
Here's what it looks like in action:
P {font-size: 12pt}
The P above is the selector and the font specification between
the braces is the property. This code says that all paragraphs
will be 12 pt font in size.
A rule can always have multiple properties. Semicolons separate
multiple properties, commas are used to separate multiple
selectors.
Example:
P { color: black; background-color:white; font-size=12pt }
This code says you want all paragraphs black with a white
background and a 12 pt font. (Why anyone would want that is
beyond me; it's just an example so go with it.)
You can always group more than one selector tag like this if you
want them all to look the same.
TD,H2,H1 { color: Red; background-color:pink }
This would make all table cells, and heading 1 and 2 tags red
with a pink background. Attractive don't you think? Again, this
is an exaggeration to prove a point (even if it is gaudy).
Selectors are not case sensitive, so "P" is the same as "p."
H2 { color: blue } this would make all heading 2 tags blue in
color.
As you can see from these examples, CSS is not that hard to pick
up and can really give you more control over your website's
appearance. For further information, check out some of these
informative sites and you'll be a CSS pro in no time at all:
http://www.InternetBrothers.com/CSS_Basics.htm
http://www.users.f2s.com/faq/cssbasic.php3
http://www.freewebmastertips.com utorials/css
http://www.builder.cnet.com/webbuilding/pages/authoring/CSSCenter
/
There are also software programs you can download that will make
the creation of CSS so much easier:
TopStyle http://www.bradsoft.com opstyle/index.asp
Dutch's CSS http://www.dutchthewiz.com/styles/Default.asp
About the author:
Merle http://www.EzineAdAuction.com "Where some of the BEST
Deals in Ezine Advertising are Made" Buy & Sell Ezine Ads in a
live auction setting! Publishers sell off your excess inventory
and Buyers pick up some Fantastic bargains. Go now!
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