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

Chris W. Parker cparker at swatgear.com
Fri May 31 17:25:01 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.

good information. thanks, i'll start to do some research.

chris.



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