Amazon.com Customer Reviews
very good training - Review written on July 20, 2008
Rating: 4 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.
I was compelled to buy this book because I am taking a Dreamweaver course at the local community college. We're most of the way through it now, and I've learned a lot, and feel pretty comfortable using dreamweaver now. For the class I'm taking the instructor pretty much just has us read each chapter of the book, follow along with the exercises in the book, then do little projects from what we learn. The point is though, the learning that we're doing is like 90% from reading the book, and if you want to cut to the chase and not bother with a class like mine, just picking up this book is a pretty nice option.
One other option that you might consider instead of this book, check out the video training by this same author. I've watched enough of it to know that it's pretty darn good, and it covers the same material that the book does. I think watching the video is in some ways a nicer, easier, more visual way to learn, but the advantage of having the book is that it also serves as a decent reference once you've been through it. Something to consider... but both are really good.
Good update from MX2004 - Review written on April 22, 2008
Rating: 5 out of 5
5 customers found this review helpful.
Garrick Chow's approach includes not only how to use Adobe's Dreamweaver but also the bigger picture of how and why a web site is organized and how to do it. Dreamweaver CS3 has so many tools to help us maintain the integrity of the sites we design and implement. Automating repetitious tasks through templates, libraries, accessibility tools, and the History features make our jobs easier as Dreamweaver CS3 offers a nice element of control when others are contributing content and even pages to the same site. Chow shows where each tool is and not only what it does but tells us why we should be using it.
Chow has taught for more than 10 years and authored several books for Lynda.com. I found this book to be clear and concise, especially for graphic designers who must create web sites and pages as part of their job now. Chow starts out explaining why and how structure to your site should be set-up from the beginning. Building a site is not the WYSWYG process many designers think it is. A web site is more a living, breathing creature unlike a static print brochure so there are many things to consider when creating or redesigning a, existing site. Even something as simple as a file name has a different role as Chow points out the importance of page titles for search engines versus page names merely convenient for the designer to remember. We always have to think of our end user every step of the way. The files are not files "seen" only by prepress folks as in offset printing, their names are critical to being found and seen--or not--by our potential customers.
Throughout the book, Chow provides sidebars filed with good tips, caveats, and charts of shortcuts and short glossaries to orient the designer new to CS3. Tips that are meant to keep us from making mistakes that would frustrate us down the road when we launch our new sites. Little things like "Creating a Site Map" are helpful in spotting rogue links quickly.
The book comes with a tutorial CD that follows each chapter so the reader can do the processes as well as read about them. I personally went from MX2004 to CS3 so I appreciated the small screen captures with key elements circled showing where things are in this newest version of Dreamweaver. The CD includes exercise as well as training videos to see how things are done in detail. The chapter on templates is not to be missed as templates are a good way to maintain set design features on a site where others create and upload pages. The Update Template File feature makes changes throughout the site so we retain control over the design with easy maintenance. Creating libraries is a smart way to keep page elements organized and even assign copyright statements to as needed. Roundtrip editing to/from Photoshop or Fireworks is a sweet and fast way to tweak an image--if you know how to access it. Chow makes it simple to find these tools.
Chow leads us on a journey, first thinking about our end user and what we need our site to provide them, then he adds the page building, CSS, tables, forms and site linking, accessibility considerations, and finishing with fun things like adding sound, music and movies.
The last section of the book deals with the growing movement toward more dynamic and data-driven web pages as Chow explains Ajax and Spry tools, like widgets and detail regions. What does Spry do exactly? It allows you to integrate complex Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) implementations into your web pages for a better web experience for your users. Chow ends the books with handy troubleshooting FAQs and how to get your site online and how run site reports to find problems. The last words are additional resources and how to install/uninstall extensions.
This is a book centered around Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 that provides a solid overview of how to approach designing for the web--and maintaining that design. My copy is already full of little bookmarks for quick reference and I'm sure that Chow would be pleased about that.
Not a book for Beginners - Review written on March 20, 2008
Rating: 2 out of 5
11 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.
This is a very thorough book, covering almost all aspects of Dreamweaver. However the author assumes that the reader already has a pretty good understanding of computer programs and web design. This book was assigned to me as the textbook for a Dreamweaver course at a local college. Most of the students, including me, had a very hard time understanding much of the terms used in this book, even in the first chapter.
Just so you know what I'm talking about, here are some quotes from the FIRST chapter. "Sure, you could use other technologies such as Java Script and CSS and server-side languages such as ASP, JSP, Adobe ColdFusion and such." "DHTML uses a combination of XHTML, JavaScript, CSS, and the DOM." "Web applications have also been referred to as data-driven, database-driven, and dynamic sites. In almost all cases, a Web application involves a database and server-side scripting, such as ASP, Adobe ColdFusion, PHP, and so on." I don't know about you, but I have no idea what the author is talking about.
I think that if you are pretty savvy about computer programming in general, or have worked with HTML before, or if you know other Adobe programs such as Photoshop, then you are probably at a level where you can take advantage of the information in this book. If, however, you are new to web design and HTML like I am, then there must be other books that explain Dreamweaver in a more simplistic way for beginners.
ugh! 3 stars - Review written on March 15, 2008
Rating: 3 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful, 5 did not.
this book is fine for learning the material, but it's weaknesses are sooo annoying that i had to detract 2 stars from my rating. here's why:
1/2 star deduction - this book gushes about dreamweaver. you enjoy his enthusiasm in the first 4 chapters. you're just rolling your eyes after that.
1/2 star deduction - this book gives you one way of doing things for windows, and in the same sentence the equivalent way of doing it for the mac.
1/2 star deduction - the book is so repetitive with its 'helpful' hints. for example, "you should still have the draft.html file from the previous exercise open. if not, complete exercise 3, and then return to this exercise".
1/2 star deduction - this book treats you like a 5 year old. he tells you to "remember" that you were styling text before (as in the directly preceding exercise), but you'll now be styling an image. DUH!
any one of these things isn't so bad in itself. but when he does ALL THESE THINGS ALL THE TIME THROUGHOUT THE BOOK NONSTOP, it gets VERY irritating! plus, these weaknesses made performing a tedious task (reading a TRAINING book) unnecessarily more tiresome!
like i said, you do end up learning dreamweaver. but i would venture to suggest that you could have done it in (dare i say it?) 1/2 the time.
Not so great - Review written on February 13, 2008
Rating: 1 out of 5
7 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
This book is just a repackaged version of their Dreamweaver 8 book, which I am also not a fan of. The book never takes a beginner through the process of creating a site from scratch. The book does not give the user any standards based and accessible layout options. The book does not emphasize best practices in web design. The book does not address the topics in a logical, learning based manner. Instead, they introduce topics section by section, glossing over things that the user hasn't even learned yet. The CSS chapter is not thorough enough and they go through a significant number of important css topics (classes, IDs, descendant selectors) without reinforcing those topics with the reader in any way. I give this book a big thumbs down. Do you want to know how to really build a web page? Read Head First HTML, XHTML and CSS. Now, that is a great book.