Designing a professional looking website - Part 2
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This video is a response to Designing a professional looking website - Part 1
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All Comments (7)
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Very good presentation! Very clear and precise. Good job!
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using tables is alright for begginers but if its a production website then tables are a no go. div tags are your best option
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I did the tables, used the eyedropper tool as you did, when I preview in firefox, I get a black line between table 1 and table 3. is there something that I need to tweek to get it right. Overall I love your simplicity on the tutorials. keep up the greak work.
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dude tnx for this kind of turorials your awesome and unselfish, I hope you continue doing your tutorials cuz you help many people like me who likes to learn dreamweaver ;-) more power!
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pretty cool
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The problems with this method are: 1) if your site is composed of several pages, you'll have to repeat all the steps to make each page; 2) in the future, if you have to make width and/or height adjustments to your containers, you'll have to open, edit and re-upload every page to your site.
The use of external Cascading Style Sheets addresses these and other problems, that's why professionals lean towards using them nowadays.
Good design, but the implementation is a bit out-of-date. IMHO.
ABCruz2310 3 years ago 2
I agree. However, I've always been a firm believer in knowing and studying old methods to truly understand all aspects of a trade. I've been planning on doing a CSS tutorial for months now, but have yet found the time to do so. Thank you for your insight though, it is appreciated. =)
CoolEditz 3 years ago
I figured it out.. cell padding and spacing should be at zero.. Great pic
richflores34 3 years ago
My bad, I guess I should have mentioned that.
CoolEditz 3 years ago