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   Book Info

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Web Design in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference  
Author: Jennifer Niederst
ISBN: 0596001967
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review



In 1998, Jennifer Niederst wrote the first edition of this very successful book after she found herself spending way too much time chasing down the solutions to HTML problems. From hexadecimal color specs to mouseover scripts, the answers are all out there, but finding the exact one you need can soak up a whole day. "I wrote Web Design in a Nutshell because it was the book I needed--one place to find quick answers to my questions."

With all that's changed in the meantime, an overhaul is welcome. This is the rare book for designers that is almost completely nonvisual. It doesn't show what's hip in navigational bars or what the coolest colors are. Rather, it gives readers the kind of know-how that can make a difference between someone who just whips up pretty pages with WYSIWYG applications like Dreamweaver and someone who can make those pages cross-platform, cross-browser, fast loading, and accessible to all.

The clear organization makes it easy to locate any specific topic. There are six sections. "The Web Environment" discusses the realities of browser compatibility, display-resolution problems, a useful bit of Unix, and tips for print designers looking to move into Web design. "Authoring" shows how to write accurate and up-to-date HTML, cascading style sheets, and Server Side Includes (like putting the current date and time on your homepage).

"Graphics" brings together all you need to know to make effective use of images (GIFs, JPEGS, PNGs, and animated GIFs). "Multimedia and Interactivity" helps with adding audio, video, or Flash to your site (including some succinct tips on optimization and publish settings). And "Advanced Technologies" covers JavaScript, DHTML, XML, XHTML, and WAP and WML. And there are six useful look-up tables in the appendix, which include HTML 4.0 tags, deprecated tags, attributes, and CSS support across browsers. Web Design in a Nutshell could easily have been titled The Web Designer's Companion--it's mighty handy to have around. --Angelynn Grant


From Library Journal
Niederst discusses everything a web designer needs, from basic principles and HTML to designing for multiple browsers, cascading style sheets, and XML. For a working web designer this book will be an invaluable quick reference, and it is written well enough that someone just starting out on the web could also use it. Highly recommended for all libraries.Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Book News, Inc.
Includes discussions of the Web environment, monitors, and browsers; a complete reference to HTML and Server Side Includes, containing browser support for every tag and attribute; chapters on creating GIF, JPEG, and PNG graphics, and designing with the Web Palette; information on multimedia and interactivity, including audio, video, Flash, Shockwave, and JavaScript; a tutorial and reference on Cascading Style Sheets; and appendices on detailing HTML tags, attributes, deprecated and proprietary tags, and CSS compatibility. This is not a source for programming, scripting, or server functions, but is geared to all levels of expertise, including the lack thereof.Book News, Inc.®, Portland, OR


Book Description
Web Design in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition contains the nitty-gritty on everything you need to know to design web pages. It's the good stuff, without the fluff, written and organized so that answers can be found quickly. This completely revised and expanded second edition is chock-full of information about the wide range of front-end technologies and techniques from which web designers and authors must draw. This book is an excellent reference for HTML 4.01 tags (including tables, frames, forms, color, and cascading style sheets) with special attention given to browser support, platform idiosyncracies, and standards. You'll also find lots of updated information on using graphics, multimedia, audio and video, and advanced technologies such Dynamic HTML, Javascript, and XML, as well as new chapters on XHTML, WML, and SMIL. Web Design in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition is an indispensible tool for web designers and authors of all levels.


Book Info
New edition is completely updated for the latest web browsers, graphics editors and authoring tools. New material on web standards, printing, accessibility, Flash, and designing for wireless devices is included. Softcover. Previous edition c1998.




Web Design in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference

FROM OUR EDITORS

The Barnes & Noble Review
In 1999, we reviewed the first edition of Web Design in a Nutshell, finding it an extraordinary breath of fresh air: full of common sense, hard facts, intelligent rules of thumb, and scrupulously fair guidance for web designers at all levels of experience. Jennifer Niederst has thoroughly updated her bestseller to reflect pretty much all the latest trends and realities of Web development.

In both editions, we've loved the perspective Niederst brings to web design. Hey, she's been doing this since 1993, before most folks had ever heard of the Web. She doesn't get carried away with the latest hype: she's more interested in helping you do what works. Having seen it all, she's able to write intelligently about virtually every web design technology -- and where space doesn't permit sufficient coverage, she offers updated web references for finding out more.

The book starts with a cogent overview of the challenges the Web presents to designers, including how to design for a variety of browsers, monitors, and output devices; and how to cope with color on the web. Along the way, she calls special attention to key issues new web designers always forget, and experienced designers occasionally need to be reminded about. (For example, what should almost always go "above the fold" on your site's first page?)

While Niederst targets her books at designers, not programmers, she clearly recognizes that designers must increasingly accommodate some pretty heavy-duty technologies. She introduces enough of the fundamentals of Web development to help designers participate intelligently in enterprise Web development teams. Also included: a "beginner's guide to the server," showing how web server directory structures are typically organized; how FTP works; and what MIME types are (complete with a detailed table of the most common, from .AI to .ZIP).

Web Design in a Nutshell includes a detailed section on HTML, fully updated to reflect the HTML 4.01 specification and the latest browsers: Internet Explorer 6 (which ships with Microsoft Windows XP), and Netscape 6.x (which, in its 6.1 incarnation, may finally be gaining a bit of traction in the marketplace). In connection with the update to HTML 4.01, Niederst has recast many of her examples using Cascading Style Sheets. (Hey, if you're still not using them, it may finally be safe to jump aboard.)

Niederst's HTML coverage encompasses everything from WYSIWYG tools to good HTML style, and brings together all that information it's hard to get your hands on (decimal to hexadecimal equivalents for specifying RGB color values, character entity codes for (c), and the like). There's also a detailed chapter on hyperlinking (including targeting windows, non-web links and protocols, and linking documents with .)

Even HTML 4.01, of course, is getting long in the tooth. Niederst presents concise, gentle introductions to both XML and XHTML, giving designers a heads-up on where these technologies are headed. There's even new coverage of WAP and the unique issues associated with designing wireless applications.

The Second Edition adds a new chapter on ensuring accessibility for individuals with hearing, sight, and other physical impairments. The highlights include fourteen practical guidelines from the World Wide Web Consortium's Web Accessibility Initiative (for instance, "provide context and orientation information" -- make sure you clearly label all frames, sections, and page structures that would require extra explanation for those who can't see them). Niederst also points you to www.cast.org/bobby/, where there's a validator that'll scan your page and point out accessibility issues.

Speaking of accessibility challenges, there's also a new chapter on Macromedia Flash and Shockwave -- part of a complete section on Web multimedia and interactivity. Along the way, Niederst covers animated GIFs, streaming and non-streaming audio (including optimizing audio clips); digital video formats, QuickTime, and more.

Detailed appendices present HTML tags and elements, attributes, deprecated and proprietary tags, CSS compatibility information, and more. Hard as it is to believe, Web Design in a Nutshell, Second Edition delivers even more useful information than the first go-round. Quite impressive. (Bill Camarda)

Bill Camarda is a consultant, writer, and web/multimedia content developer with nearly 20 years' experience in helping technology companies deploy and market advanced software, computing, and networking products and services. He served for nearly ten years as vice president of a New Jersey–based marketing company, where he supervised a wide range of graphics and web design projects. His 15 books include Special Edition Using Word 2000 and Upgrading & Fixing Networks For Dummies®, Second Edition.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Web Design in a Nutshell contains the nitty-gritty on everything you need to know to design Web pages. Written by veteran Web designer Jennifer Niederst, this book provides quick access to the wide range of technologies and techniques from which Web designers and authors must draw. Topics include understanding the Web environment, HTML, graphics, multimedia and interactivity, and emerging technologies.

SYNOPSIS

Web Design in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition contains the nitty-gritty on everything you need to know to design Web pages. It's an excellent reference for HTML 4.01 tags (including tables, frames, forms, color, and cascading style sheets) with special attention given to browser support, platform idiosyncracies, and standards. You'll also find lots of updated information on using graphics, multimedia, audio and video, and advanced technologies such Dynamic HTML, Javascript, and XML, as well as new chapters on XHTML, WML, and SMIL. This book is an indispensible tool for web designers and authors of all levels.

FROM THE CRITICS

Library Journal

Niederst discusses everything a web designer needs, from basic principles and HTML to designing for multiple browsers, cascading style sheets, and XML. For a working web designer this book will be an invaluable quick reference, and it is written well enough that someone just starting out on the web could also use it. Highly recommended for all libraries.

Booknews

Includes discussions of the Web environment, monitors, and browsers; a complete reference to HTML and Server Side Includes, containing browser support for every tag and attribute; chapters on creating GIF, JPEG, and PNG graphics, and designing with the Web Palette; information on multimedia and interactivity, including audio, video, Flash, Shockwave, and JavaScript; a tutorial and reference on Cascading Style Sheets; and appendices on detailing HTML tags, attributes, deprecated and proprietary tags, and CSS compatibility. This is not a source for programming, scripting, or server functions, but is geared to all levels of expertise, including the lack thereof. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

     



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