软件名称: Beginning CSS Web Development: From Novice to Professional
软件介绍
How excited are you then? Is the prospect of becoming a professional CSS genius getting you
tingling in all the right places? Once you have read this book, you’re going to be a full-fledged
web wizard, using CSS to save you and your clients time, money, and stress.
Before you board the bus to CSS enlightenment, it is worth acquainting yourself with some
of the terms bandied about by web designers and developers, and this author in particular.
Web Standards and Accessibility
This demands a brief history lesson. In 1994, as dinosaurs lay gasping their final breaths, the
World Wide Web Consortium (www.w3.org) was formed to promote common approaches and
interoperability for the Internet. Part of their work was to create web standards specifications
such as (X)HTML and CSS, evolving these specifications in line with the requirements of web
developers and web users to make the Web a better place for all of us.
For years, web standards didn’t carry much weight with browser manufacturers, who were
often slow to realize their importance. Web sites built using standards would render inconsis-
tently across user agents, making the whole thing very frustrating for designers and users alike.
If you weren’t around in these bad old days of web design, then you are very lucky indeed.
Helping to fight the corner since 1998 has been the Web Standards Project (WaSP), which
fights for standards that reduce the cost and complexity of development while increasing the
accessibility and long-term viability of any site published on the Web. The WaSP team works
with browser manufacturers, authoring tool makers, and web designers to push for greater web
standards. Fueled by the blood, sweat, and tears of passionate, responsible web evangelists,
the Web Standards Project is a grassroots coalition fighting for standards that ensure simple,
affordable access to web technologies for all. Visit http://webstandards.org, the opening page
of which you see in Figure 1, for more of the “buzz.”
In 2003, a very nice man with a woolly hat wrote a book called Designing with Web Standards
(New Riders). That man was Jeffrey Zeldman (www.zeldman.com), and his book revolutionized
the way many approached web design. A core text cited by many as the beginning of the true
revolution, Jeffrey’s book made many think twice about how they built web sites, and uncom-
promisingly made the case for using CSS, while also increasing awareness of accessibility
and usability.
tingling in all the right places? Once you have read this book, you’re going to be a full-fledged
web wizard, using CSS to save you and your clients time, money, and stress.
Before you board the bus to CSS enlightenment, it is worth acquainting yourself with some
of the terms bandied about by web designers and developers, and this author in particular.
Web Standards and Accessibility
This demands a brief history lesson. In 1994, as dinosaurs lay gasping their final breaths, the
World Wide Web Consortium (www.w3.org) was formed to promote common approaches and
interoperability for the Internet. Part of their work was to create web standards specifications
such as (X)HTML and CSS, evolving these specifications in line with the requirements of web
developers and web users to make the Web a better place for all of us.
For years, web standards didn’t carry much weight with browser manufacturers, who were
often slow to realize their importance. Web sites built using standards would render inconsis-
tently across user agents, making the whole thing very frustrating for designers and users alike.
If you weren’t around in these bad old days of web design, then you are very lucky indeed.
Helping to fight the corner since 1998 has been the Web Standards Project (WaSP), which
fights for standards that reduce the cost and complexity of development while increasing the
accessibility and long-term viability of any site published on the Web. The WaSP team works
with browser manufacturers, authoring tool makers, and web designers to push for greater web
standards. Fueled by the blood, sweat, and tears of passionate, responsible web evangelists,
the Web Standards Project is a grassroots coalition fighting for standards that ensure simple,
affordable access to web technologies for all. Visit http://webstandards.org, the opening page
of which you see in Figure 1, for more of the “buzz.”
In 2003, a very nice man with a woolly hat wrote a book called Designing with Web Standards
(New Riders). That man was Jeffrey Zeldman (www.zeldman.com), and his book revolutionized
the way many approached web design. A core text cited by many as the beginning of the true
revolution, Jeffrey’s book made many think twice about how they built web sites, and uncom-
promisingly made the case for using CSS, while also increasing awareness of accessibility
and usability.
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