[thelist] accessibility: suggestions/recommendationsforcommercial site and coding standard

Samir M. Nassar nassarsa at redconcepts.net
Fri May 31 17:19:01 CDT 2002


Chris,

The quick answer is sure.

I see about 10 DIV's, and they can be positioned fairly easily. Now,
You'll have differences across browsers, but that can be factored in.

I think that CSS sites are simple, because they don't have to be
complicated.

If you know what to watch for and knowing the box model then moving
those chunks around in DIV's is farily easy.

I'm currently working on a site with 3 divs, with a header, sidebar
content layout. It'll get a footer and a link menu in the right side.

http://redconcepts.net/hwc/womenhealth.shtml (in dev)
http://redconcepts.net/hwc/styles/screen.css (stylesheet)

Your site pretty much has that ground architecture.

Now for the right DIV you can add 3 more DIV's for the 2 news sections
and the mailing list section.

In the content are you'll have the 4 DIV's the text experiment on the
bottom, the two DIV's by the side, and the top image.

It'll take work, but CSS doesn't have to be simple.


Samir M. Nassar










More information about the thelist mailing list