Adobe 38040334 User Guide - Page 152

Laying out s with CSS, About CSS layout, About CSS layout structure

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DREAMWEAVER CS3 145 User Guide Laying out pages with CSS About CSS page layout A CSS page layout uses the Cascading Style Sheets format, rather than traditional HTML tables or frames, to organize the content on a web page. The basic building block of the CSS layout is the div tag-an HTML tag that in most cases acts as a container for text, images, and other page elements. When you create a CSS layout, you place div tags on the page, add content to them, and position them in various places. Unlike table cells, which are restricted to existing somewhere within the rows and columns of a table, div tags can appear anywhere on a web page. You can position div tags absolutely (by specifying x and y coordinates), or relatively (by specifying their distance from other page elements). Creating CSS layouts from scratch can be difficult because there are so many ways to do it. You can create a simple two-column CSS layout by setting floats, margins, paddings, and other CSS properties in a nearly infinite number of combinations. Additionally, the problem of cross-browser rendering causes certain CSS layouts to display properly in some browsers, and display improperly in others. Dreamweaver makes it easy for you to build pages with CSS layouts by providing over 30 pre-designed layouts that work across different browsers. Using the pre-designed CSS layouts that come with Dreamweaver is the easiest way to create a page with a CSS layout, but you can also create CSS layouts using Dreamweaver absolutely-positioned elements (AP elements). An AP element in Dreamweaver is an HTML page element-specifically, a div tag, or any other tag-that has an absolute position assigned to it. The limitation of Dreamweaver AP elements, however, is that since they are absolutely positioned, their positions never adjust on the page according to the size of the browser window. If you are an advanced user, you can also insert div tags manually and apply CSS positioning styles to them to create page layouts. For a tutorial on creating CSS page layouts, see www.adobe.com/go/vid0155. See also "Working with div tags" on page 162 About CSS page layout structure Before proceeding with this section, you should be familiar with basic CSS concepts. The basic building block of the CSS layout is the div tag-an HTML tag that in most cases acts as a container for text, images, and other page elements. The following example shows an HTML page that contains three separate div tags: one large "container" tag, and two other tags-a sidebar tag, and a main content tag-within the container tag. September 4, 2007

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DREAMWEAVER CS3
User Guide
145
Laying out pages with CSS
About CSS page layout
A CSS page layout uses the Cascading Style Sheets format, rather than traditional HTML tables or frames, to
organize the content on a web page. The basic building block of the CSS layout is the div tag—an HTML tag that in
most cases acts as a container for text, images, and other page elements. When you create a CSS layout, you place div
tags on the page, add content to them, and position them in various places. Unlike table cells, which are restricted to
existing somewhere within the rows and columns of a table, div tags can appear anywhere on a web page. You can
position div tags absolutely (by specifying x and y coordinates), or relatively (by specifying their distance from other
page elements).
Creating CSS layouts from scratch can be difficult because there are so many ways to do it. You can create a simple
two-column CSS layout by setting floats, margins, paddings, and other CSS properties in a nearly infinite number of
combinations. Additionally, the problem of cross-browser rendering causes certain CSS layouts to display properly
in some browsers, and display improperly in others. Dreamweaver makes it easy for you to build pages with CSS
layouts by providing over 30 pre-designed layouts that work across different browsers.
Using the pre-designed CSS layouts that come with Dreamweaver is the easiest way to create a page with a CSS layout,
but you can also create CSS layouts using Dreamweaver absolutely-positioned elements (AP elements). An AP
element in Dreamweaver is an HTML page element—specifically, a
div
tag, or any other tag—that has an absolute
position assigned to it. The limitation of Dreamweaver AP elements, however, is that since they are absolutely
positioned, their positions never adjust on the page according to the size of the browser window.
If you are an advanced user, you can also insert
div
tags manually and apply CSS positioning styles to them to create
page layouts.
For a tutorial on creating CSS page layouts, see
www.adobe.com/go/vid0155
.
See also
“Working with div tags” on page 162
About CSS page layout structure
Before proceeding with this section, you should be familiar with basic CSS concepts.
The basic building block of the CSS layout is the div tag—an HTML tag that in most cases acts as a container for text,
images, and other page elements. The following example shows an HTML page that contains three separate div tags:
one large “container” tag, and two other tags—a sidebar tag, and a main content tag—within the container tag.
September 4, 2007