by For Dummies
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 36147 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 10/06/2008 1:18:16 AM MDT |
| Price Used: | $5.39 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Label: | For Dummies |
| Pages: | 384 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 2005-03-18 |
| Published By: | For Dummies |
| ASIN: | 0764584251 |
| Category: | Book |
Authors
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
- Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) is a Web markup standard that allows Web designers to define the appearance and position of a Web page using special dynamic effects
- This book is the perfect beginner reference, showing those new to CSS how to design Web pages and implement numerous useful CSS effects available
- Seasoned For Dummies author Richard Mansfield explains how CSS can streamline and speed up Web development
- Explains how to take control of the many elements in a Web page, integrate CSS into new or existing sites, choose the best coding techniques, and execute advanced visual effects such as transitions
- U Features a special discussion on browser incompatibility issues involving CSS and how to solve potential problems
Customer Reviews
Tolerable for casual users - Reviewed on 2008-09-27
If you're looking for an easy entry into learning CSS and don't care about portability between browsers and operating systems, this is an OK guide. It's easy to read, the tone is casual and friendly, and the basics are described fairly well.
If it's at all important to worry about how things will appear for anything other than IE on Windows, however, this is a very poor choice.
The author covers the basics of CSS fairly well, with only a few glitches and oversimplifications. Unfortunately, he also spends a lot of time complaining about the syntax, the design of the syntax, the designers of CSS in general, and dismisses the mere idea of validity checking, insisting the tools are too rigorous. That approach is carried through the book, with a deliberate exclusion of concern for usability outside one specific--albeit large--audience: current users of IE on current versions of Windows. Even the trouble-shooting section makes little mention of dealing with inconsistencies.
He notes that he won't waste time on theory--but does so frequently enough that it would have been faster to include the theory than the constant "I won't bother you with that" disclaimers.
If you already have a copy, it's not a horrible book to read. If you have any option and care about understanding how to design an effective webpage using CSS, I can't recommend spending money on it, however.
CSS Web Design BY Dummies - Reviewed on 2008-08-19
1 customer found this review helpful.
This book may have been useful in a IE6-only world. However, since the world has moved on, a book dedicated to CSS-for-IE6 is now outdated, at best. While I appreciate that he is writing from an IE-centric viewpoint and am OK with skipping functions IE doesn't recognize, including ActiveX in an introductory CSS book (in the beginning chapters, even) is simply misguided. Sure, you can fade your text ... if your viewer is willing to accept the ActiveX warnings.
Further, the author takes the Dummies "casual" approach (which I generally do not mind) beyond the level of good taste. He spends far too much time insulting the creators of CSS (among others), expects me to admire his inability to understand concepts, and actually crosses into condescending far too often. Here's a choice example: "Don't worry about why you use the (0). It's a quirk of computer languages that makes no sense - they start counting up from zero rather than one. Just use the code and don't bother your pretty head about it." (You have the opportunity to be told not to worry your "pretty head" about things more than once. Brilliant.)
Arrogance is one thing, but when there are as many sloppy errors in code and concept as there are here it becomes almost laughable. I can accept the occasional grammar or formatting error, but the code should be checked more thoroughly -- sometimes an error is repeated over and over. For examples, on several occasions he uses equal signs instead of colons, which might leave the beginner wondering a bit why the code misfires, and his demonstration of the nth-child selector is simply incorrect.
I can't say there's nothing to be learned from this book, and it has the makings of being a decent introduction to CSS. Some of his comments on style and avoiding tacky design may be helpful and he does a decent job of avoiding being too technical. However, I'm really glad I made use of the library for this one, and whoever checks it out after me will be glad of the corrections I've left behind.
can't do it - Reviewed on 2007-11-15
3 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
It has some interesting examples, but it got into unnecessary explanation of the thousands of ways to address a tag, a bit annoying. Then I got to page 91, where the author tries to explain the difference between "relative" and "absolute" positioning of elements. Here I encountered one of my biggest pet peeves. I will let you read it yourself:
"Of course, as Albert Einstein pointed out, everything is relative except the
speed of light. So, when we speak of "absolute" positioning, it merely means
that we're being somewhat "less relative." What do I mean by this?
You actually cannot sit still, no matter how hard you try. When you think you're
sitting still, you're still moving at about a half million miles per hour as the solar
system spins around the galaxy. In fact, you're moving through space in a rapid
and complex corkscrew path. Even while you're quietly asleep, you're still flying
aboard the rotating earth, orbiting the sun, spinning around the galaxy. And the
galaxy itself is hurtling through the universe. So you're moving really fast in a
dozen different circles all the time. Luckily, so is your bed and everything else
in your room. They're all at rest, relative to you, but not relative to light."
What? Did he really..? I am staring away like Jim from The Office, into an imaginary camera right now.
Waste of time and money - Reviewed on 2007-08-30
I actually took the time to find this title on Amazon just to write a review (and hopefully save people money).
I'm not a professional designer, I'm not even a very good hobbyist designer.
I only know what I need to know to get the result I want on the page.
So I figured it might be time to actually understand what I'm doing and not copy and alter existing code, and this is the first book on CSS I read.
And it was not at all helpful.
I learned a lot more from occasionally googling to an online free tutorial, and looking at the source code of free CSS templates that I liked.
This book is a very basic intro into CSS, pretty much only targeted to IE users (because, who uses anything else, right?! *hmpf!*) and I really struggle to try and find something nice to say about it after plowing through it all for 4 hours.
And if you're using Dreamweaver this whole book can be summarized in 5 pages
(or heck, let me try 1 line: open the CSS Rule definition box, adjust the value, and see what it does).
This book did not explain things clearly, and there was a lot of useless information to sift through.
For example: who on earth would want to use those very very ugly default image borders/bullets/horizontal lines in the first place (and the book says nothing at all about customizing those, which I think should be possible with CSS?? )
Also I really want to mention the website layout/design samples in the book,
text over a too busy background so that it becomes very hard to read: Bad!!
So, in short, stay away from this one, even if you can get it for free you're wasting your time.
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Book Subjects
- Computer Software Packages
- Computers
- Computer - Internet
- Computer Books: Web Programming
- Internet - Web Site Design
- Computers / Internet / Web Site Design
- Cascading style sheets
- Design
- Web sites