Microsoft Office TrainingThe UK's Number 1 for Microsoft Office Training Sitemap add this page to your favourites/bookmarksBookmark page

view a printable version of this pagePrintable version
Customer: Sign in
Delegate: Sign in
Trainer: Log in

CSS Tips for Dreamweaver

Dreamweaver allows users to create web sites quickly and easily. Dreamweaver training introduces the many features the software has to offer faster than self-study could. One of the most powerful features, yet one that some budding web designers have trouble mastering, is the use of Cascading Style Sheets (CSS).

Inline, Embedded or External?

Per Dreamweaver training, CSS is a collection of design specifications telling the browser how a page should look. These instructions can be designated in one of three places.

Inline CSS is a one-time style designation. Let's say you have one word on the page you want in a particular font or color to make it really stand out. You might be tempted to make a single CSS definition around the word figuring you'll never use it again but there is no advantage in doing so. And if you do decide to use it on another page, you have to hunt down the style.

Embedded CSS is listed at the beginning of the page to be used one or more times on the page. Again this is commonly used for elements used only on a single page, yet there is always the possibility some or all of the elements will be used elsewhere requiring duplication.

The best method discussed in Dreamweaver training for CSS implementation is an external document. All your design elements are in one place and can easily be changed as the look of the site changes. It makes the site faster to load since the CSS code is loaded only once rather than over and over for each page.

Supporting Multiple Browsers

Using CSS as detailed in Dreamweaver training does not guarantee your page will look the same on every browser. Each browser has its own way of interpreting CSS styles so it is important to view your page on as many browsers as possible.

This does not mean just IE vs. Firefox. There are a wide variety of browsers for unique uses. Vision impaired visitors might be using text readers. Other people might be looking at your site on BlackBerrys or iPhones. Some users access the web through their televisions. The more general and less browser-specific you make your CSS, the more users your site can serve.

Dreamweaver Support of CSS

Depending on which version of Dreamweaver training you received, you may have learned about the standard CSS styles included in the software. Starting with CS3 Dreamweaver included some common layouts for users who don't want to create their layouts from scratch.

Dreamweaver improved their support of CSS further in CS4 by the introduction of standard terminology. Dreamweaver training on CSS used to be a bit confusing because the software used its own designations. For example what CSS calls font-family Dreamweaver called just font. The latest versions of the software use standard CSS terminology.

Mastering the complexities of CSS takes time but is well worth the effort. It leads to versatile web sites that can effortlessly change their looks to fit the browser, content or user preference.

Author is a freelance copywriter. For more information on dreamweaver training, please visit http://www.microsofttraining.net


Original article appears here:
http://www.microsofttraining.net/article-415-dreamweaver-training.html


Back to article list

Distribution notes

PUBLICATION GUIDELINES


Rate this page:
3.0/5 (57 votes cast)
Institute of IT Training - Accredited Training Provider ILM
Microsoft Certified Partner
Microsoft Office Specialist Authorised Testing Centre (MOS and MCAS)

Prodigy Platinum Learning Partner

Institute of IT Training - Accredited Training Provider
McAfee Secure sites help keep you safe from identity theft, credit card fraud, spyware, spam, viruses and online scams
Association of Computer Trainers verified by visa, mastercard securecard

Mini sitemap. These are the main areas of our web site. Full sitemap.

Professional & Management

Professional Skills courses
Project Management Course London
Project Management Courses London
Project Management Training London
Project Management Training
Project Seminar
Project Seminars
Time Management Course London
Time Management London
Time Management Courses London
Time Management Training London
Introduction to Finance course
Assertiveness Skills course
Effective Communications Skills training
Presentation Skills London

Training Formats

Public scheduled courses
On-site training
Closed company courses

MS Office & IT Applications

Excel courses
Excel training
Excel Training Courses Medway
Microsoft Excel training
Microsoft Project training
Microsoft Office training
Microsoft Outlook training
Microsoft Powerpoint training
Microsoft Word training
MS Project courses
MS Project training
Outlook courses
PowerPoint courses
PowerPoint training
VBA courses
Word courses
(more...)

Crystal Reports training

DreamWeaver courses
Dreamweaver training

Training Information

London Computer Training
Computer Training London
Docklands Training Courses
Docklands Training London

Training venues
Client list
FAQ
Pricing and availability
Course details / Syllabus

Training Information
Training Articles
Microsoft Training Blog

Interested in Access training?
Please see the following pages:

Access courses
Access training
Microsoft Access training
Microsoft access courses
Microsoft training access course
Microsoft+access+training
Access courses in london