Intranet Journal
The online resource for intranet professionals

Back to Article | Home | Discussion Board | Tutorials | Columns/Advice ]

Click to buy Cascading Style Sheets: The Definitive Guide

Cascading Style Sheets: The Definitive Guide


By Eric A. Meyer

 

 


 

Introduction
What a Mess
Rich Styling
Ease of Use
Using Your Styles on Multiple Pages
Cascading
Preparing for the Future
Implementations
Bringing CSS and HTML Together
Summary

Chapter 1
HTML and CSS

Summary

In order to facilitate a return to structural HTML, something was needed to permit authors to specify how a document should be displayed. CSS fills that need very nicely, and far better than the various presentational HTML elements ever did (or probably could have done). For the first time in years, there is hope that web pages can become more structural, not less, and at the same time the promise that they can have a more sophisticated look than ever before.

In order to ensure that this transition goes as smoothly as possible, HTML introduces a number of ways to link HTML and CSS together while still keeping them distinct. This allows authors to simplify document appearance management and maximize their effectiveness, thereby making their jobs a little easier. The further benefits of improving accessibility and positioning documents for a switch to an XML world make CSS a compelling technology.

As for user agent support, the LINK element has been universally supported, as have both the STYLE element and attribute. @import didn't fare so well, though, being ignored outright by Navigator 4. This is not such a major tragedy, annoying though it might be, since the LINK element will still let you bring external style sheets into play.

In order to fully understand how CSS can do all of this, authors need a firm grasp of how CSS handles document structure, how one writes rules that behave as expected, and most of all, what the "Cascading" part of the name really means.

Introduction
What a Mess
Rich Styling
Ease of Use
Using Your Styles on Multiple Pages
Cascading
Preparing for the Future
Implementations
Bringing CSS and HTML Together
Summary

Back to Article | Home | Discussion Board | Tutorials | Columns/Advice ]

Copyright 2002 Jupitermedia Corporation, All Rights Reserved.
Legal Notices | Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions | Privacy Policy | Advertising on Intranet Journal
Home | eXchange | F A Q | Find | Register |