by Peachpit Press
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 534421 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $3.90 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Label: | Peachpit Press |
| Pages: | 160 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 2006-01-02 |
| Published By: | Peachpit Press |
| ASIN: | 0321370228 |
| Category: | Book |
Authors
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
You may not be a professional Web designer, but you do want to design a decent Web page. There's no place better to start than with the de facto tool of choice for just about anybody creating Web pages and this slim, low-priced guide to it! The same things that have made Dreamweaver so popular with the pros—an easy-to-use, no-nonsense interface and a slew of features and utilities—also make it the perfect tool for your purposes. This full- guide provides the quickest route to creating a fun and functional Web page with it. Each short chapter uses big, bold screen shots and step-by-step instructions to illuminate one aspect of the process. By the end of the volume, you will have created a simple Web site, filled it with text and graphics, added navigation and links, and tested and posted the final product. Timely tips and occasional sidebars detailing good design practices round out the package.
Customer Reviews
Flawed but Useable - Reviewed on 2006-08-07
8 customers found this review helpful.
Although the book gives you the impression that you'll be building the website shown in the book from start to finish, much like you'd assemble a piece of IKEA furniture, the book itself is never quite committed to this goal. Sometimes it seems like you are indeed building the project in the book, at other times the lessons appear isolated from each other, and are shown only for you to apply them to your own project. If the site in the book were a table from IKEA, you would end up with two legs attached to the top, plus a number of parts left over, and be one frustrated owner.
The book should be re-edited to live up to its QuickProject name, strictly focusing on the concept of walking the reader through a project from start to finish, and put together in a smoother fashion so that you are indeed building the site as shown, and will end up, at the end, with the site as shown.
That said, I was able to use the book to approximately build the site depicted in the book, but this was only after cursing the places where one lesson didn't flow into the next, and girding myself to forge ahead anyway. There were a number of times where I wanted to throw the book at the wall, and I consider myself to be someone who is good at putting things together. Someone with less determination would have given up, and I couldn't blame them.
This is a shame, because the visuals are beautiful, and the step by step instruction, within a lesson or major concept is very good. I learned a lot about Dreamweaver quite effortlessly, once I got past the choppy nature of the book, and became willing to accept a much less than perfect website. I did feel a bit cheated however.
The obvious lack of testing of the instructions in this book is amateurish, and the people who produced this book should be ashamed of themselves, given all the other great work that went into it. This could've been a really great tutorial but for the obvious lack of focus on the QuickProject core concept, and the lack of follow through to make sure the entire web project flowed seamlessly.
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Book Subjects
- Desktop publishing software
- Publishing on the Internet
- Desktop Publishing
- Computers
- Computer - Internet
- Computer Books: Web Programming
- Computers / Internet / Web Page Design
- Internet - Web Site Design
- Desktop Publishing - General