The Art and Science of CSS


Being a programmer not only means using great code, knowing good css is also beneficial. Ever been stuck creating that perfect, user friendly gui? the markup just couldn't handle the code? What should you do? Quick fix the markup or make your code a little dirty? If you actually answered either of those as yes. I'd though the book at you!

I am a sitepoint member and I discovered a very interesting book I'm reading "The Art and Science of CSS". It has been written by Cameron Adams, Jina Bolton, David Johnson, Steve Smith & Jonathan Snook. This book covers the fundamental elements of the web page, such as headings, images, backgrounds, navigation, as well as applied styles such as those used in forms, rounded corners for content boxes, and tables. These exercises will encourage you to address the questions of art and science in all the design choices you make, not just for the end user but as a technological asistant.

This book is ideal for anyone that wants to takee there CSS skill a step further and improve the applications. I very important issue that every developer faces is browser compatibility. After viewing and practicing a few of the examples you find in this book will assist you in taking steps closer to solving those issues during development time.

Yes designers, you will also find amazing stuff in this book to get those designs looking perfect and not having to tweak the design to accommodate the markup or code.

Take a trip over to Sitepoint now and check out this book

Sea el primero en calificar este post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Posted by: karl
Posted on: 24/11/2008 at 2:06
Categories: Css
Actions: E-mail | Kick it! | DZone it! | del.icio.us
Post Information: Permalink | Comentarios (0) | Post RSSRSS comment feed

Publicaciones relacionadas

Añadir comentario


(Mostrará su icono Gravatar )  

  Country flag

[b][/b] - [i][/i] - [u][/u]- [quote][/quote]



Vista previa

miércoles, 10 de marzo de 2010 8:35