CSS - Best Programmed Css Sites (ranked)
Hi guys,
Could you please make up a list of the best programmed CSS sites (markup-wise).... I haven't found anything near that in the sticky threads you have over here. 1/ k10k.net 2/ ??? 3/ ? Thank you Similar TutorialsHi guys, Could you please make up a little list of the sites that u think best use CSS 2? Very good for learning P.S. I want pure CSS 2 (no basic table syntax or css 1 whatsoever) Thank you Ive just finished building my site and ive implemented a text only alternative. I have not used CSS deliberately as i am unsure whether this, in some cases, is not supported by certain browsers. Reason i ask is because i want to specify font size as a % rather than px or pt so that end users can change the view to text "small" or "large" Would i be better off doing this in the html or by attaching a CSS? Thanks in advance, cuban I've done a few web sites. Nothing really snazzy - I tend to focus on the information being available rather than having it "look cool". As a result, I've received various comments from "it's fantastic" (from people who are actually trying to find information) to "it's boring" (from those who are used to the frantic Flash-based web sites on a lot of the social networking places). There's a huge age range in users, too - it's a school-related site, so there are Jr. High students and their parents looking at it. Anyway, as a revamp, I started to look at CSS templates, partly as a way to play with CSS, but also because it seems to be the "right way" to do things these days. My earlier efforts use frames, and there's a header, a footer, a left-side navigation frame, and then the right-side "info" frame where everything shows up. So I did some Googling and found some offerings for free CSS templates. Grabbed a few and looked, and they are much nicer than my basic colors and styles. So I started working up a sample site and hit a snag when I wanted to do a second page. There was a sample index.html that had a section with a navigation menu on the left, and a flexible middle column, and a fixed column on the right. I got a basic front page together, and decided to create a new menu item for "About us", and link that to a new page. Here's my issue/problem - it seems that the way to create the new page is to duplicate the index.html, then hand tweak the menu to indicate the current location (there's a class="current" attribute on a <a> tag), and then rework the text section in the middle. While that's doable, it offends my programmer's ethic of "do the work only once", which, in this case, means that I can't see why the menu has to be rebuilt each time. Am I missing something? Is this the way that multipage sites based on CSS layouts really work? Or do I need to find a better sample or tutorial on doing a multipage site where the efforts need to be made once to get a menu working, and then leave it alone until a real change is required. Hi, I am seeing an error which I think is because of z-index, the error is really strange. See these two posts in two different sites (while keeping in mind that the data is same only the sites are having different css) Code: 1st site (buggy one) : http://bloghutsbeta.blogspot.com/2012/03/testing-3.html 2nd site (the okay one) : http://www.bloghuts.com/2011/08/wizard-fashion.html To see the error please go to first site then click on PLAY and while keeping it open, kindly go to the 2nd on and then click on PLAY you will see the error that I am talking about, I am not able to understand what's going on? |