Search DominoPower's 11,441 Lotus-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
Cascading Style Sheets make you look good (continued)

Here's the secret: end users, clients, existing customers, potential customers, and your company management all make their first assessment of the value of your software based upon their first impressions of how cool it looks.

Not upon features and functions.

Not upon scalability and reliability.

Not upon performance.

Not upon minimization of defects.

Upon how cool it looks.

I can hear what you're saying. Surely people couldn't be that stupid? Surely they see past the surface? Surely they aren't so shallow as to judge the quality of software based on how cool the user interface is?

Well here's some tragic news for you: people are that shallow. I don't know why. Maybe it's because the underlying concepts of a new software application are too complex for most people to grasp immediately. Maybe it's a natural human tendency to value things that have an attractive visual appearance.

The good news is that if your target user interface is Web browser based, there's an easy solution: CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). Cascading Style Sheets give you an enormous degree of control over the display of HTML page elements. More control than anything you can do with plain old HTML alone.

If you're doing browser based development and you don't understand Cascading Style Sheets, you should instantly drop everything you are doing and learn. Right now. Seriously.

Even better, Cascading Style Sheets are easy to implement and will reduce the amount of time that it takes you to develop HTML. You heard me right--it will reduce your HTML coding time. No more digging through hundreds of lines of code changing <FONT> tags in every possible location because someone wanted to see your pages with Verdana instead of MSComicSanSerif.

Cascading Style Sheets are highly relevant for Lotus Domino programmers too. Lotus Domino browser-based applications tend to have a distinctive Lotus-ish look about them. Develop your application using Cascading Style Sheets, and it's only the URLs that will betray the fact that you've built it using Lotus Domino.

Cascading Style Sheets will allow you to turn that tired old HTML application interface into a sleek, 21st century, ergo-dynamic, rip-roaring funk machine worthy of inclusion in The Matrix 4. Your clients will be blown away. Your customers will buy your software. Your peers will respect you. Your manager will pat you on the head. And it will only take you a single day. One day.

Heigh-ho, Heigh-ho, it's off to work we go
So let's get down to work. This month I'm going to show you how you can get going with Cascading Style Sheets with virtually no code at all. I'm going to do that by showing you a number of examples of HTML page elements that have Cascading Style Sheets applied to them. You can see a sample of what we'll be discussing at http://www.touchdown.com.au/dpapr2002.html.

There are three key methods for implementing Cascading Style Sheets. Linked CSS uses an external file containing all of the CSS properties. Embedded CSS is the term used when the style sheet is contained on the HTML page. Inline CSS is the term used when the CSS properties are actually included within the HTML page element, using the STYLE tag.


« Previous  ·  1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  4  ·  5  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Internet Technologies > HTML and CSS (15 articles)
   Using a reusable code approach to HTML select option lists
   One reader's opinion on HTML mailing
   Keep lookin' good with Cascading Style Sheets
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent DominoPower Articles
Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
Learn Domino Designer 8.5 for free
The (near) future of Sametime, Quickr, Connections, and Symphony
Inside the IBM Innovations lab
Lotusphere 2010: Hot fixes and cool news for Notes, Domino, and LotusLive
Lotusphere 2010: mobility and collaboration
2010: A Lotusphere of change
Latest Lotus Headlines
Xpages not loading? JVM errors? - Solution
How to implement an iCalendar feed into your Notes calendar with XPages
DWA Hotfixes for Domino 8.5.1FP1 - A Gotcha
IBM Adds DB2 to Lotus Foundations SMB Package
SNTT : XPages onclick Ghosts in the machine
Ports used by Lotus Sametime 8.5 servers
Exploring a Domino Date Bug
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: The iPad defenders have spoken
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
OutlookPower: More about disappearing text
-- Advertisement --

Find unused Lotus Notes groups and clean up your address book
Have you ever wanted to get rid of old Lotus Notes groups that were cluttering up your address book, but you weren't sure if they were used? Find Unused Groups can help.

Find Unused Groups will check your ACL, mail, multi purpose and server groups to help you determine if they are used, and who uses them.

Learn how to easily clean up your address book.

-- Advertisement --

Teamstudio Edition 25 has shipped
It's finally here! Now that Teamstudio Edition 25 has shipped, listen to our latest Tool Time audio program to find out what's changed. Updates to all your favorite Teamstudio tools will be discussed.

Plus, you'll get an introduction to Teamstudio Undo (formerly known as Teamstudio Snapper).

Tap here to get started!

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login