Designing with Web Standards (Voices That Matter)
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Average customer review:Product Description
When the last edition of this book was published, the whole concept of standards-based Web design was a new and fairly radical one- People needed some convincing to adopt the practice. Not so today! Two years and nearly 30,000 copies later, standards-based Web design has become standard practice for Web developers who want to create functional, effective sites while shaving development costs and complying with accessibility laws. Best-selling author and standards evangelist Jeffrey Zeldman has updated the classic guide that shook up an entire industry and changed the way everything from vast e-commerce sites to local church and school home pages are designed and built. Written in the same engaging and witty style that makes even the most complex information easy to digest, the guide includes all the latest techniques that will enable developers to redesign sites faster, make content more visible to search engines, and deliver sites that promise to work as well five years from now as they do today. Readers will learn where the standards come from, how to understand them, how to work with them, how they solve many of the most pressing problems facing Web designers, developers, publishers, and site owners, and more.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #141502 in Books
- Published on: 2006-07-20
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 432 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
When the last edition of this book was published, the whole concept of standards-based Web design was a new and fairly radical one: People needed some convincing to adopt the practice. Not so today! Two years and nearly 30,000 copies later, standards-based Web design has become standard practice for Web developers who want to create functional, effective sites while shaving development costs and complying with accessibility laws. Best-selling author and standards evangelist Jeffrey Zeldman has updated the classic guide that shook up an entire industry and changed the way everything from vast e-commerce sites to local church and school home pages are designed and built. Written in the same engaging and witty style that makes even the most complex information easy to digest, the guide includes all the latest techniques that will enable developers to redesign sites faster, make content more visible to search engines, and deliver sites that promise to work as well five years from now as they do today.
About the Author
Jeffrey Zeldman is among the best-known Web designers in the world.
Customer Reviews
A little too much tub-thumping
As an amateur website designer, who tries to stick to modern standard-based layout, I'm always keen to pick up tips from the pros. This book certainly helps with this, there are a lot of useful tricks and pointers to websites I might otherwise have missed.
Like other reviewers, I found that the earlier part of the book is overly concerned with the methods of 5 to 10 years ago. People buying the book will probably be sold on CSS-based layout (or at least standards as the method of choice) before they buy. So a much shorter case would suffice. There is an over-emphasis on older browsers as well: Netscape 4.x, IE/Win 4 and IE/Mac 5 get much too much space. Most people are targeting IE 6, Firefox Opera 8 and Safari today.
Overall, there is a lot to learn from this book. Be prepared to skip over the lecturing, though.
How frustrating........memories of the past
After the first 200 pages of negativity, I had to throw the book in the bin!
Zeldman continually patronises the developers of the past working in environments of which the browser providers had no standard (to which still continues to a greater or lesser degree today). The fact that multiple instances of a site were required to cater for the anomolies between browser types and versions is true however CSS would not have saved the day then nor now.
Zeldman is right......you do need standards and from what I was picking up on his thoughts, the standards you create yourself are probably appropriate to the work you are performing. This I agree with Zeldman however blaming the development strategies of the past are not the way forward. I do understand Zeldmans frustrations from the past however blaming each developer for using multiple font tags is not really approprite for the time he refers.
I was looking for technical inspriation to the world of CSS (of which I totally agree is the way forward). Certainly, the first two hundred pages do not offer this. I could not cope reading further......hence the book went in the bin.
Out of date and mainly rhetoric
It's ironic that a book that is so much about future proofing spends so much time talking about version 4.0 browsers, making much of the book fairly obselete.
Much of the other content is out of date. It reccomends the box model hack, when conditional comments could be used. Fahner image replacement is also detailed, when newer methods eliminate the need for a non-semantic span element.
It is also vague. For example many of the reasons cited to use XHTML are not really convincing. "New browsers love XHTML ... and accord it special treatment" is too vague. To say that using an XHTML 1.0 strict doctype because it switches all browsers to standards/almost standards mode and therefore your site is more likely to work in all browsers would be better.
In short it attempts to fight old beliefs with new beliefs, rather than knowledge




