:-) I made a group website that uses css, but apparently not as well as it could? I had a friend beg to redo the code, and then do so. So now I'm thinking that I'd like a better grip on what style css is supposed to have before I use it on the website people check when they want to give me jobs. Right now we can just go with simple and robust.
I managed to miss this earlier -- here are some belated thoughts on the website:
1) On the web, I try to avoid using underlining for anything except links -- otherwise people will see the underline, think it's a link, and try in vain to click on it. If you want to add emphasis, use boldness or size or color.
2) The "graph-mining algorithms" link is broken.
3) If you're doing lists for "Recommended Secret Weapons" and so on, why not also have your favorite poets in a list, for consistency?
4) isn't going to work in most browsers. You want . Ideally, you probably want to offload all style information into a separate style sheet. Feel free to borrow mine (and tweak it as much as you want for your own purposes). But I also think that a web page can look really great and classy with no CSS whatsoever
( ... )
Comments 5
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
1) On the web, I try to avoid using underlining for anything except links -- otherwise people will see the underline, think it's a link, and try in vain to click on it. If you want to add emphasis, use boldness or size or color.
2) The "graph-mining algorithms" link is broken.
3) If you're doing lists for "Recommended Secret Weapons" and so on, why not also have your favorite poets in a list, for consistency?
4) isn't going to work in most browsers. You want . Ideally, you probably want to offload all style information into a separate style sheet. Feel free to borrow mine (and tweak it as much as you want for your own purposes). But I also think that a web page can look really great and classy with no CSS whatsoever ( ... )
Reply
Leave a comment